yes... contact the board of appeals
Expunging a record can be done if a judge is petitioned. It does not happen very often, but it is possible even if the charge is burglary.
From your criminal history records, perhaps. But not from your DMV record. It remains a permanent part of your drivers history.
A felon with an expunged record can get a dental hygienist license in California. When someone is expunged it is erased so it will not longer be on your record.
You should probably attempt to have your criminal record expunged or sealed before you seek a position as a teacher anywhere in the United States.
Immediately.
There are various levels of burglary charges. You can hope to get probation and not go to jail for a burglary charge in SC if you do not have a record.
You have to do a lien and then submit to the Judge to have it expunged from your record.
If it was expunged by court order, the record will not available to the general public. But the 'true' record is still available to the courts, law enforcement, and government agencies.
Well, let's clarify what it means to expunge a case: it means to DELETE it COMPLETELY. This means essentially THERE IS NO RECORD!! So to have a record EXPUNGED means to have it DELETED. When you have a felony record expunged it's as if it never occurred. Therefore the public cannot see the record, nor can police. And you then have the legal right to say you don't have a record (at least not that one: if you do not have any other record you have NO record). Therefore to answer your question, YES, you can work as an anesthesiologist with an expunged record.
The criminal portion of the DUI might possibly be expunged from your ciminal history record, but it can never be expunged from your driving record. Your driving record truly is "forever" and is a complete record of your driving history from the very first time you were issued your license.
A criminal record is expunged of each individual offense at a time, on the order of the Court. You would have to petition the Court for each individual offense you wished expunged from your record. Whether or not it's expunged is entirely up to the Court.
In Ohio, DUI convictions cannot be expunged from your criminal record. The conviction will stay on your record permanently.