Yes, however there are no publicly accessible websites that have this infomration. You may go to your local law enforcement agency and request a copy of your own criminal record. Bring proper identification and, in most places, there is a small administrative fee.
While each case is judged on its own merits, for the sentencing phase, the judge will have access to your previous criminal history, and your past record (or lack of one) may influence their decision.
from the court where you were convicted, by looking up your case number.
The visas are checked by the embassy therefore based on criminal record the embassy could either decline or approve visas.
The short answer is YES. Juveniles commit crimes and can have criminal records. Each state has its own laws regarding access to juvenile criminal records. Each state may also have special laws which allow a juvenile to be tried as an adult, with the arrest and trial results a part of the adult criminal record. Listed below is a web-site which provides each state's statutes with regards to accessing juvenile records.
How do you sponge criminal record
The "official" history of your criminal record never goes away. The expunction simply means that the PUBLIC does not have access to it.
In very general terms, anyone 18 or older without a criminal record.
With no criminal record, 18 for long guns and 21 for handguns.
Yes, all this information is routinely shared between the states.
Civil law suits are not criminal activity. They are a part of you public record, but not your criminal record.
Require that they produce a copy of their criminal history record before employing them. Otherwise, you cannot access that information. It is not available to the general public.
Derek Hinton has written: 'The criminal records book' -- subject(s): Access control, Criminal registers, Directories, Police, Records and correspondence, States, Criminal records 'The Criminal Record Manual'