In order to be a police officer your record has to be completely clean.
Whether or not you can join the police force if your spouse has a criminal record for drugs would depend on the specific regulations and policies of the police department you are applying to. Each department may have different criteria for eligibility, so it would be best to inquire directly with the department you are interested in joining for their specific requirements.
It will depend on the department policy, but whether or not it stops you from applying, it will put you at a disadvantage.
a criminal record. but its worth it dude :L
Time in prison and a criminal record.
Not unless they occurred prior to your 18th birthday. If you were an adult they become a permanent part of your criminal history record.
In the US, a police officer ... or anyone else ... is allowed to ask if you use drugs. You're not necessarily obligated to tell them, but they're allowed to ask.
If you were never arrested there will be no record of it on your criminal history background check at all. If you WERE arrested but the case was dropped or dismissed, the arrest will show up but also the fact that it was dropped/dismissed will also.
There are many kinds of "records." You are in the record system for the jurisdiction that you were in. If you were not arrested and charged with a crime, you are not in a state or national criminal database.
Petty much be a ... 1)on drugs 2)killer 3)gang member
It all depends on; the charge - the amont of drugs - the type of drugs - your past criminal record - and if the charge is state or federal.
probably
It's not impossible to become a police officer with a juvenile criminal record, but it will be very difficult, especially while you're in your 20s. You will need to show that the juvenile offense was the result of behavior you have abandoned and you have maintained a clean record of good conduct for many years since. This means no arrests, no traffic violations, a good work record, no use of illegal drugs, and meeting all of your financial obligations.
YES you can.. as long as you have a clean record now..