Research reveals that is appears difficult to expunge a record in Maryland. However see the below link to determine if you quailfy:
See below link:
Felony charges ANYWHERE never go away unless they are legally "expunged."
Perhaps. If it was a state charge - if your state allows you to petition for it and - if you qualify for it. If it was a federal charge, forget it.
Felony Charges Stay in your Specific State Permanently. They will also stay in your background for good too no matter if the Felony has been set aside from a Suspended Sentence or not. If you qualify under your state's law, you may want to try to get the Felony Charge Expunged later on down the road if you haven't committed any crime since the felony offense.
Sexual offenses, ESPECIALLY forcible sexual offenses, are not eligible for expungment in ANY state.
a felony can be expunged from your record
Only if your state happens to be one of the states that restores your firearms privileges along with expungement.
A felony charge/conviction stays on your criminal record forever. Petition the court to have your record "expunged" and it should be accompanied by good reason(s) that it should be granted. After consideration, it may or may not be granted.
No, they cannot.
A felony conviction record is forever unless it is expunged. If you qualify for expungement you can have the offense expunged. HOWEVER - an expungement only hides the conviction from the general public. Law enforcement, the courts, and government agencies will always have access to it which would prevent you from ever possessing a firearm.
Yes you can. I guess it varies state to state, but as long as the felony conviction is not a drug distribution charge you should qualify.
The best suggestion would be to research the expungement law of the state you were arrested in, to see if you are eligible to have the charge expunged from your record.
You can't "erase" it, it never 'goes away." But, you can file a motion with the court to have your record 'expunged' so that the charge will not appear on the part of your record accessible by the public. Law enforcement and the courts will still have access to it, however.