Rules for state licensure vary by state. Check with your own state's licensing board.
Yes, However you wil still have to disclose the offense and present a certified copy of both the charging document and the expungement order along with your license application.
You have to do a lien and then submit to the Judge to have it expunged from your record.
No, a felony will not ever go away unless a persons record has been expunged. A person would have to go to a district court and ask for a record to be expunged.
Per California Insurance Code Section 1668.5(a) The commissioner may deny an application for any license issued pursuant to this chapter...if the applicant or holder...is any of the following: (5) The controlling person has been convicted of any of the following: (A) A felony. Per California Insurance Code Section 1668 (Re: Denial of application after hearing; grounds) The commissioner may deny an application for any license issued pursuabnt to this chapter if: . . . (m) The applicant has been convicted of: (1) a felony . . .
No. Unless it has been expunged.
The criminal offense for which you are serving the sentence of probation will always remain on your criminal history record, unless expunged. Your drivers license violation will always remain on your drivers record. Your drivers record is PERMANENT record and cannot be expunged.
No.
You can't get car insurance if your drivers license has been suspended.
If theOffice of Financial and Insurance Services has the discretion to grant an insurance producers license to a person with a prior felony conviction but fails to exercisediscretion but denies all?.......................answer to this................If the Office of Financial and Insurance Services has the power to choose right decision to grant an ISL(insurance producers license) to a person who has commited any crime and been proved guilty of the samebut the Office of Financial and Insurance Services fails to make right judgment and also refuses everything.........
A felony charge that has been dismissed may still appear on a background check unless it has been expunged or sealed. It is recommended to check the laws in your jurisdiction regarding expungement or sealing of criminal records to ensure the charge does not show up on a background check.
nope
Expungement has a different meanings in different jurisdictions and provides different rights; so the answer really depends on where your conviction and expungement occurred. Keep in mind that one of the main reasons law schools ask about criminal records is to ascertain if the applicant will eventually be able to be pass the character and fitness portion of the application to practice law. The license to practice law is a state license and many states require that you disclose expunged convictions when applying for a state license.
Records of valid felony convictions are permanent and cannot be expunged except by order of the governor of the state (or the President if a federal felony) or in some circumstances at the appellate level due to a wrongful conviction.