No. The deportation order is forever. You could have a lawyer in the US petition the court to change your status. Don't bet on it.
NO
anyone can answer what ever they want?
A felon may not own, possess, or have access to firearms. That's federal law, to which all states are subject.
can a ex felon get a liquor license in Alabama
Do you have to register as a ex-felon in Henderson nv
can a ex-felon from california get a guard card in nevada.
You are never an ex felon, once a felon always a felon...While this is true, it's irrelevant to the question. You can try Carolina Cargo.
Ex-felon is a widely misused term. Unless you've been acquitted of a crime you'd been previously convicted of, you're not an ex-felon - ex-convict, perhaps, once you're no longer state property, but still a felon.
That depends on the use of "ex-felon". If the husband was a convicted felon whose conviction was later overturned and their sentence reversed, then the husband is no longer a felon - that is an ex-felon. If the husband is a convicted felon who simply completed his sentence, that is not an ex-felon - that is a felon.In either case, the wife retains the right to own a firearm. However, doing so in the case of a felon husband may send her husband right back to prison - under federal law, a felon may not purchase, possess, or be given access to firearms. Having a firearm in the same home can be considered allowing a felon access to firearms, even if kept in a gun safe.
A felon is someone who committed a felony(More serious crime) An ex felon is someone who has finished parole and is back in society. Sorry, that is incorrect. "Ex-felon" is a grossly, almost always misused term. A person who was in prison on felony charges but is now out of prison is still a felon. The only way to be an ex-felon is to have been acquitted of the charges. I should also add that an expungement does not make you an ex-felon either. An expungement simply means the felony is no longer on your PUBLIC record. Also, a felon can sometimes have his rights restored, but that doesn't make you an ex-felon either.
Well, explain what you mean by "ex-felon". Were they convicted, and then acquitted of the charges later on? Because if they weren't, then they're not an "ex-felon" by any means - they are, and will always remain, a felon. Under federal law (that means, it applies to every state and territory of the United States), a felon may not purchase, possess, or have access to a firearm. Now, if they were later found to not be guilty of the crime they were convicted of, and were acquitted, then their rights would be restored.
That depends on whether we're talking about an actual ex-felon here, or if you're using the term for what is actually an ex-convict. An ex-felon would be someone who had been convicted of a felony, but for whom the conviction was later overturned and reverse. They are no longer a felon at that point. For someone who is convicted of a felony, and the judgment does not get overturned, they are a felon - the label does not go away.In the case of an actual ex-felon, who is no longer a felon by a reversal and overturning of their conviction, yes, they may be.In the case of an ex-convict, who still remains a felon, the answer is no. A felon may not purchase, possess, or be allowed access to firearms.