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Probation Violations

A probation violation puts everything at stake all over again. The suspended sentence that was never imposed — the prison term sitting in the background while you stayed compliant — can be executed. The terms that felt manageable when probation started can become the basis for revocation if something goes wrong. And unlike the original criminal case, a probation violation hearing uses a preponderance of the evidence standard, not beyond a reasonable doubt. At the Law Office of Nic Cocis, we defend clients facing probation violation allegations in Murrieta and throughout Southwest Riverside County, with the urgency these situations demand.

How Probation Violations Work in California

Formal vs. Informal Probation — and Why It Matters

California has two types of probation, and the distinction affects how violations are handled.

Informal probation — also called summary or court probation — typically applies to misdemeanor convictions. There’s no probation officer. The defendant is responsible for complying with conditions set by the court, which commonly include paying fines, completing community service, attending required programs, and avoiding new criminal charges. Violations come to the court’s attention through new arrests, missed court dates, or unpaid financial obligations.

Formal probation applies to most felony convictions and some misdemeanors. A probation officer supervises the defendant, conducts home visits, and reports violations to the court. Formal probationers must check in regularly, submit to search conditions, and comply with all imposed terms. A probation officer’s report of a violation triggers the court process.

The Probation Revocation Hearing

When a violation is alleged, the court issues a bench warrant or a notice to appear. A revocation hearing follows — and this is where the standard of proof matters. The prosecution must prove the violation by a preponderance of the evidence, meaning more likely than not. That’s a significantly lower bar than the beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard of the original criminal trial. Hearsay evidence is admissible. The defendant has no right to a jury.

At the hearing, the court decides whether a violation occurred and, if so, what to do about it. The range of responses is wide: reinstating probation with the same conditions, modifying conditions, extending the probation period, imposing additional sanctions like county jail time, or revoking probation entirely and imposing the previously suspended sentence. The judge has broad discretion, and how the case is presented at the hearing — including mitigation, the nature of the violation, and the defendant’s overall performance on probation — directly affects the outcome.

New Charges vs. Technical Violations

Not all violations are equal. A new criminal charge while on probation is the most serious type of violation — the underlying arrest gives the court grounds to revoke independent of any conviction on the new charge. A technical violation — missing a check-in, failing a drug test, not completing a required program on time — is serious but often more manageable if addressed properly.

The response depends on context. A first technical violation after years of clean compliance is treated very differently than a pattern of non-compliance or a new felony arrest. We present the full picture at the revocation hearing — the defendant’s compliance history, the circumstances of the alleged violation, employment, family stability, and any other factors that bear on whether revocation or a lesser modification is appropriate.

How We Can Help with Probation Violations

Nic Cocis has handled probation violation hearings in Southwest Riverside County courts for over 25 years. The stakes at a revocation hearing are real, and representation matters even when — especially when — the violation is technical rather than a new crime.

Our probation violation defense services include:

Appearing at the arraignment on a bench warrant and addressing custody status
Contesting the factual basis for the alleged violation at the revocation hearing
Presenting mitigation evidence to minimize consequences where the violation is conceded
Negotiating modified probation conditions as an alternative to revocation
Defending against new criminal charges that triggered the probation violation simultaneously
Seeking reinstatement of probation after a violation finding

Acting Before the Hearing

If you know a violation is coming — a missed check-in, a failed test, an arrest — the time to contact counsel is before the hearing, not after. Early intervention can sometimes address the issue with the probation officer before a formal violation report is filed. We advise clients on how to approach their probation officer, what documentation supports their position, and how to minimize the severity of what gets reported to the court.

What to Expect When You Work with Us

01

Immediate Assessment and Warrant Address

If a bench warrant has issued, we address it at the earliest opportunity — typically the next court date — and argue for release pending the revocation hearing. Extended pre-hearing custody is common and avoidable with prompt action.

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02

Review of the Alleged Violation

We examine exactly what the probation officer or prosecution is alleging, whether the evidence supports it under the preponderance standard, and what context and mitigation exists. Not every alleged violation is provable, and some are factually contested.

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03

Revocation Hearing Representation

We appear at the hearing, cross-examine the probation officer, present mitigating evidence, and argue for the least restrictive response — reinstatement, modification, or time served. The judge has discretion, and how that discretion is exercised depends significantly on the quality of the presentation.

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04

Post-Hearing Guidance

If probation is reinstated with modified conditions, we advise on compliance and — where appropriate — pursue early termination of probation under Penal Code § 1203.3 at a later date.

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Facing a Probation Violation in Murrieta or the Surrounding Area?

Probation violations move quickly and the stakes are high. Contact the Law Office of Nic Cocis for a consultation. We serve clients in Murrieta, Temecula, Menifee, Lake Elsinore, Wildomar, Winchester, Canyon Lake, French Valley, and throughout Southwest Riverside County.

Why Choose the Law Office of Nic Cocis?

Immediate Response

Probation violations are time-sensitive — we move quickly

25+ Years of Riverside County Court Experience

Familiarity with local judges and how they approach revocation hearings

Full Criminal Defense Capability

Handles the new criminal charge and the probation violation simultaneously when both are in play

Multilingual Services

English, Romanian, and Spanish available

Frequently Asked Questions

Not necessarily — but the risk is real, and the outcome depends heavily on the nature of the violation, your history on probation, and how the hearing is handled. Courts have wide discretion at revocation hearings. A first technical violation after a clean record often results in a warning, a modification of conditions, or a short jail term with reinstatement. Repeated violations or a new criminal charge presents higher revocation risk. We assess the realistic range of outcomes in your specific situation and build the strongest case for the least restrictive response.

Yes. When a bench warrant issues on a probation violation, you can be arrested and held in custody until the revocation hearing. Bail may or may not be available depending on the judge’s discretion and the nature of the underlying conviction. One of the first things we do in a probation violation case is appear before the court to address custody status and argue for release pending the hearing. The sooner we act, the sooner that argument can be made.

Circumstances matter at a revocation hearing. Judges regularly consider the context of a violation when deciding how to respond. A missed check-in caused by a hospitalization, a failed drug test in the context of a documented relapse and immediate re-enrollment in treatment, or an inability to pay fines due to documented unemployment are all factors that can support a mitigated response. We gather the documentation and present the context — the point isn’t to excuse the violation, it’s to give the court a complete picture of what happened and why revocation isn’t the appropriate response.

Yes. California law allows the court to proceed with a probation revocation hearing based on the facts underlying a new arrest, even before that case is resolved and even if you’re later acquitted. The preponderance of the evidence standard governs the revocation hearing independently of the criminal case’s outcome. This is one of the most challenging aspects of probation violations triggered by new arrests — and why handling both cases simultaneously, with coordinated strategy, matters.

Areas We Serve

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