For a PARDON, you must apply to the Governor's Office of the state in which you were convicted.
A felon cannot practice law in Illinois or in any other state. Lawyers need to have good character and be able to prove it to be licensed by the board.
No. A "pardon" means that only his sentence has been pardoned. it does NOT mean that his crime or offense is wiped clean. He is still a convicted felon, just as if he had served the full term of his sentence in prison. As a convicted felon he may never own, or be in possession of, firearms.
No.
yes
Because no one wants a felon around them with sharp objects!
Never, unless their conviction gets overturned - not expunged, not pardoned, but actually overturned.
No. Granted 'clemency' or not, you remain convicted of the crime with which you were charged - a convicted felon. It is a federal offense for a convicted felon to ever own or "possess" a firearm (US Code, Title 18).
Being pardoned does not allow a felon to possess a firearm. Only an overturning of the conviction can do that.
Yes. Rick Hendrick pled guilty to mail fraud in 1997. He was later pardoned by President Bill Clinton.
yes
Waylon was never convicted of a crime to be pardoned for.
He is not a felon- he was only convicted of two misdemeanors of withholding information from Congress. He was appointed by the first President Bush, which was a controversial move at the time. Later, he was pardoned as Bush was leaving office. He didn't even serve any jail time.
Medical license revoked after convicted felon?