In the U.S. each state sets its own laws and requirements for obtaining a permit, however, since (generally speaking) a felon cannot own or possess a handgun, I can't imagine that any state will issue a permit to a felon.
It depends. Partly, it depends on what state you're in (if you're in the U.S.) but also, what type of violation? If you mean a traffic violation, normally that won't keep you from getting a gun permit.
No. Regardless of what state you reside in, it is a violation of FEDERAL law (USC, Title 18) that prevents convicted felons from ever owning or possessing firearms or ammunition.
No, unless you've been granted special permission by the police.
A DUI conviction or any felony conviction becomes a permanent part of the convicted person's criminal record.
It is almost impossible to get a felony off your record. The only way to get a felony conviction off your record is to get a pardon.
Yes.
Unless you are able to get the court to expunge your record, the felony conviction will stay with you for the rest of your life.
There is no statute of limitations on a felony drug conviction. You were charged and convicted. It is a part of your record forever.
A felony conviction will remain on your 'record' indefinetly, until you have it expunged via Court order.
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.
Unfortunately to say, you can't
For life.
Felonies are forever... Expunging a record is very difficult and very costly.
Forever. Any charge/conviction will never fall of a record.
A conviction stays on your record and will affect you for life.