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Section 571.070 of the Missouri Revised States provides that convicted felons may not possess firearms. Federal law also prohibits felons from possessing firearms.
Contact your local police department to report it... However you must be absolutely sure of the laws in your state... In many states If both are convicted felons and they are legally married then they are permitted to live together as husband and wife... In other states 2 felons may reside at the same address if they are family members and one/both of them are not on parole or probation.
Yes...if you are a convicted felon and reside in Pittsburgh PA, and your felony record is greater than 5 years old, you are eligible to apply for Section 8 housing.
No, it is illegal for two convicted felons to reside in the same place. They are not even supposed to spend time together outside of the home. If convicted felon #1 got pulled over for something felon#2 could go to jail for guilt by association. The only "loop hole" I know of is if two or more convicted felons were in a vehicle together and had some type of Alchoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous material such as books, pamphlets, journals etc, they would be OK obviously as long as they weren't doing anything illegal! The drug/alcohol recovery material is their reasoning as to why they are together. Another answer: If the terms of either's probation or parole prohibit contact with other convicted felons, no. Another thought: As to the first answer, that won't hold up because anyone could throw AA books in their car and claim they're going to a meeting. No way will a judge let that go. but I don't know the rules about association. However, convicted felons may live together if they are married and the terms and conditions of parole/probation allow for it. It all comes down to that. I suspect that even if two felons are married, if the judge says no, he can enforce it. If they are not married but terms and conditions as set down by judge/parole/probation agent allow a specific couple to reside together, it would only apply to those specific people. The only thing that can be done is to be completely open and honest with judge/PO and find out what is allowed and what isn't as per each individuals terms and conditions.
With the exception of convicted sex offenders (in many jurisictions) unless you are limited by the provisions of your parole to a certain location or area, you may reside anywhere.
AN EXPUNGEMENT IS NOT A PARDON! Expungement only removes the record of your offense from being available to the public. Law enforcement, the courts, and government agencies will always have access to your actual 'true' record. FELONS CONVICTED IN STATE COURT OF STATE CRIMES: If your request for expungement is granted and you are a resident of a state which completely or partially restores your "rights" (you will have to do research to learn if this applies to your state), you will still remain subject to any restrictions that your state laws place on you (e.g.- voting rights - elective office - firearms/ammunition possession - etc). CAUTION: FEDERALLY CONVICTED FELONS: It remains a FEDERAL felony for a federally convicted felon to EVER own or possess a firearm. The U.S. Criminal Code, makes the penalty for illegal possession of a firearm a mandatory minimum of fifteen (15) years in prison in some cases (Title 18 U.S.C. sec 924(e)(1). At this time federally convicted felons have no solution to their firearm disqualification. Congress has effectively suspended the review of federally convicted felons' petitions for restoration of their firearms privileges, by denying funding for the purpose.
It can depend upon what state (or country) you reside in. You will have to research your own state's firearm laws.
It is always a federal offence for a convicted felon to posses a firearm, and in most states it is always illegalAdded: While SOME states DO have provisions for re-instating LIMITED firearm possession rights WITHIN THEIR STATE borders ONLY. You must research your states statutes CAREFULLY to determine if you reside in such a state.The ruling federal statute is 18 USC, Sections 921 & 922.
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It may depend on the state you live in. As a generalstatement a convicted felon usually loses the right to vote - hold political office - own or possess firearms - and in the case of convicted sex offenders you may have restrictions on where you may reside.
Yes, convicted felons can vote in the State of New York if they are no longer in jail and no longer on parole. In other words, if you committed a felony, came out of jail, and you are no longer on parole, you can vote. Thing is, the ex-offender must re-register to vote. Plus, because this not common knowledge in New York, most convicted felons believe that they have lost the right to vote forever. Disenfranchising American felons is allowed in some states, but not New York State.
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