Generally they don't check for casual visitors but under the law, a drug conviction, no
matter how minor or how long ago, renders all persons (even US citizens) ineligible for
entry to the US. If you do not declare the conviction and are caught, the failure to
declare is a separate, added offence and you could be looking at some serious hard time
prior to being ejected from the US.
If your record is verifiable, probably not.
can i enter the philippines with a drug conviction
can i enter thailand with a drug conviction and served one year jail time for the crime
In Kansas, there is a statute of limitations for a felony with drug conviction. The statute of limitations have a grid that divides crimes by severity level and categorizes defendants by their prior criminal records.
Normally yes, if the conviction is a violent one, or drug related. Different Dept.'s have different standards for entrance.
Question is unclear. Are you asking how long the record of your conviction will remain on file? If so, unless you committed the offense prior to your 18th birthday, a conviction is a permanent record in your adult criminal history record.
It may be considered a terrorist conviction.
If you have a prior offense, and judgment was for testing, absolutely.
It might be a terrorist conviction.
no
There is no statute of limitations on a felony drug conviction. You were charged and convicted. It is a part of your record forever.
No. A felony conviction disqualifies one from obtaining a teaching certificate in any state. Actually I know that it depends on the state as far as how their laws go. obviously if you have a violent conviction, a sexual related conviction or a drug related conviction, you would not be allowed to get a teaching certificate. I am asking however, about a non-violent, non-sexual, non-drug related crime. I had read previously that Ohio's law is that you must wait 5 years from the date of your conviction and I was just wondering if this was in fact true.
Not in most cases. If the drug conviction was a misdemeanor than yes, and only if it's an old conviction -- not less than 7 years. If you were convicted more recently for personal possession (misdemeanor), you may be required to proved you have completed or are in a drug treatment program.