No, you cannot. Felons are prohibited from owning, possessing, or having access to firearms, period. This is federal law.
If you are asking if the felony conviction from Texas will still be a felony conviction in another state, then yes. Once convicted you are marked for life.
The state which convicted him.
Yes, unless the record was sealed or expunged. Felony convictions remain on your record indefinitely.
A felony is the most serious level of crime for which you can be convicted. Your conviction will effect you in all of the United States and will follow you to any other countries you might visit, if you can get a passport. Many countries, such as Colombia, are very cautious about felony drug convicts, who they regularly forbid entrance.
you always have to
yes in just about every state
In Arizona, individuals with felony drug convictions are generally ineligible to receive food stamps under federal law. However, states have the option to modify this rule, and Arizona has chosen to do so. If a convicted drug felon complies with the state's requirements, completes treatment or counseling, and passes drug tests, they may be eligible to receive food stamps in Arizona.
You must apply for expungement to the state in which you were convicted, and you must have completely served your sentence or obligation, or be under any kind of supervision.
yes, once convicted of a felony, your'e a felon for life.
It depends on what state and whether not it was an illegal possession, distribution, or consumption felony.
Laws vary from state to state, but in most jurisdictions you cannot legally own a gun if you have been convicted of a felony, unless your gun rights have been legally restored.
In Arizona a class 3 dangerous felony can have a maximum sentence of up to 15 years with no prior record. A dangerous class 3 felony is not eligible for probation.