Talk to an attorney. You need to prove that the employer acted improperly or with malice.
Probably, because the record of your arrest will exist, accompanied by the disposition of your suspended imposition.
Pennsylvania Acts 33 and 34 require that prospective employees of agencies serving children (Act 33) and public and private schools (Act 34) present evidence to a potential employer or internship site of any criminal record with the State Police, or a statement from the State Police that such a record does not exist. A plea of "no contest" is effectively the same as a guilty plea, and will show up on your crimional history record. It may be entirely up to the prospective employer whether or not they offer youemploymnent or not.
Expunged means removed, therefore the record no longer exist and would not be a factor. If the party had other criminal offenses on record that were not erased then those would appear in background check.
to protect both the employee and employer
to protect both the employee and employer
Arrest Warrants never expire. They exist until canceled by the judge.
This varies. Some states do not place a entry on your public criminal record at all for a non-charge arrest. Some will have an entry for a given period. A charged offense will be entered but the duration is dependent on your age and the charge.Another View: You will have no record of your PROSECUTION. However, unless the arrest occurred before your 18th birthday, the record of your ARREST will continue to exist unless it is expunged by court order.
Probably not, because UFO sightings are so extremely unlikely that one can safely assume they do not exist.
the right of both the employer and the employee must be be adhered to and protected at all times
Just because the State declined to prosecute the charge does not mean the record of your arrest goes away. Unless you take legal action to have it expunged, the record of your arrest will always exist.
The sum of all the fossils that exist is called that fossil record. It includes fossils from all geologic time periods.
It is always on your background check. Depending on the crime, you may request that it be expunged from your record--if you were in your teens when you did this, don't count on that automatically happening without your request.