For the OFFICIAL answer to your question you should contact your state's Fish and Game Commission and ask them straight out. An expunged record only means that the general public will find no record of your prior felony. However, law enforcement, the courts and government agencies continue to have access to your "true" record, and this may mkae a difference. Call them and see. CAUTION: With your status as a convicted felon you will have to check CAREFULLY to determine if you are eligible to carry, or be around, firearms at all. State and Federal law can vary on this subject, so research the subject carefully since the federal term for violating this law can carry a 15 year prison term.
A felony will stay on your record for life. Even if you expunge your record it will still be there.
Depends on if it is felony or misdemeanor. Misdemeanor than yes, eventually but with a felony than no.
It can depend on what the juvenile arrest was for. For a felony crime? Probably not.
No, you cannot do that. You have not even finished the sentence for the crime yet. Most places require you to wait several years after the end of the sentence to expunge it, if it is possible to do so.
You certainly can. If the record was destroyed because of it being a juvenile conviction, you'd be perfectly fine.
In New Jersey, unlike most states, a DUI does not become a felony upon multiple offenses. It can still become a felony in certain situations such as DUIs which involve minors.
no
No
That's the whole point - if the request for expungement is granted by the judge the charge will NOT appear. It will be removed from the PUBLIC record. In the future only law enforcement, the courts, and government agencies will be able to have access to it.
Someone can still become an officer in the army if he has a DUI incidence in his records. The army does not deny people with such records and misdemeanors.
No. Even though the record was expuinged, it means that it is not accessible to the PUBLIC. Law enforcement, the courts, government agencies and organizations that do background checks for security clearanaces still have access to them.
It depends upon the wording of the statute in your paarticular jurisdiction. In some states it is a misdemeanor and in others it is a felony, in still others it can depend on how much resistance was given to the officer and can range from a misdemeanor charge up to a felony.