Your question requires more specific facts. Were these charges concluded and a Judgment and Sentence imposed, or was the defendant a fugitive for 20 years. If probation or parole was a factor, were those conditions complied with?
If the charge was concluded and the sentence complied with, some states will permit expungement (dropped) of the record of the case, and others won't. The status of your cases in the states where they are of record must be checked, along with the expungement laws, to provide a definitive answer.
There are different statutes for different situations. For criminal charges many felonies have none and others are set at 5 years. For most debts it is 6 years.
no.
New Mexico provides different types of penalties for different types of second degree felonies. If your felony resulted in the death of another or a sexual offense against a child, the punishment stated is 15 years imprisonment and a fine of $12,500. All other second degree felonies: 9 years imprisonment, $10,000 fine.
Sentencing guidelines vary by jurisdiction. Murder will typically get you 20 or more years. Rape Other Felonies, particularly if it is a 2nd or third offense.
No, the criminal act is a federal offense and is not subject to a SOL.
Class C felonies are limited to three years in Washington. It is tolled for any time out of state.
No, you have to seal your records.
All states offer expungement - but all states offer it in different forms and the requirements are different.
The statutes on felonies will vary depending on the jurisdiction. It will also depend on what type of crime it is defined as at that location. It could be anything from two years to no limit at all. Some states to do not apply a statute of limitations to felonies.
In Connecticut, as in most states, it will depend on what the specific charges are. Such felonies are set at 5 years. Misdemeanors will be set at 1 year. Fleeing the state tolls the statute.
If the ticket has been issued, there is no SOL to be applied. Pay the fine or appear in court. The SOL is two years for misdemeanor violations, three years for felonies.
Yes! You can leave the USA at any point (obviously unless you're in jail), no matter when you were convicted of the felony, or how many felonies you have been convicted of.