No. And, time served is a matter for the judge to decide. If the judge does not determine that you will receive credit for time served, you will receive no credit. Typically, also, state time is not calculated until you are remanded into the custody of the state's DOC. That can happen on paper if the prisons are full and you must wait for a slot to open.
If your stay in Country Jail was to serve a sentence for another separate offense - when that sentence is concluded you will be shipped off to prison to serve the sentence for whatever felony offense you were found guilty of. If you are simply being held awaiting housing availability in prison, the court MAY add your county jail time to your 'good' time.
County is a jail not a prison, its generally a temp holding for pending court, shorter sentence, misdemeanors etc. Prison is longer sentence for felonies .
the time you spent in prison should be deducted from your sentence
It depends on the original sentence. If the original sentence was greater than one year and one day, your will serve your time in a state penitentiary. If the sentence was less than one year, you may serve it in a county jail, but the judge could mandate prison.
county jail is supposed to be for sentences 12 months and under. any sentence involving 1 yr or more is sent to state prison
Lancaster County Prison was created in 1737.
Lehigh County Prison was created in 1869.
Felonies are more than one year sentence in prison. Have you been to prison? If so you are a felon. Town, city, village or county jail is usually for misdemeanors.
I don't think she went through her trial yet. She pleaded not guilty and still waiting trial.
SP3 means that there was a sentence to State Prison and all the inmate's paperwork has been processed and he/she waiting for transportation to the Department of Corrections.
Typically, time spent waiting for the decision in an appeal will only be subtracted from a sentence if the convicted defendant is incarcerated during the appeal process.
It's not an assured thing but, yes, oftentimes it is applied to the sentence as "good" time.