House arrest is when the judge allows you to serve a jail sentence at home. You must wear a monitoring anklet and are allowed to leave your home only for work and school. You will be charged a fee for house arrest in addition to any other fines and costs the court orders you to pay.
Legal Handbook
- Consumer
- Documents
- Domestic Relations
- Employment
- Landlord & Tenant
- Small Claims Court
- Student Rights
-
Traffic & Misdemeanors
- City of Lincoln Tickets
- DUI - Driving While Under The Influence Of Alcohol Or Drugs
-
Fifth Stage: Sentencing
- Can I Get My Criminal Record Expunged Or Erased?
- Can I Speak To The Judge Before I'm Sentenced?
- How Will This Conviction Affect Me?
- What If I Can't Pay My Fine?
- What If I'm Sentenced To Jail?
- What Is A Pre-Sentence Investigation?
- What Is Probation?
- What Is Work And School Release?
- What Kind Of Penalties Will I Be Facing? (Misdemeanor Chart)
- What is "House Arrest"?
- First Stage: Arrest
- Fourth Stage: Trial
- If You Are the Victim of a Crime
- Misdemeanors
- Parking on UNL Campus
- Party Related Legal Issues
- Second Stage: Arraignment
- Third Stage: Pretrial Motions, Plea Bargaining, Pretrial Diversion
- Traffic Offenses