Not necessarily. It really depends on the company you want to work for and what they look for in an applicant.
Only if you are getting a private loan. If you get a government loan it will not affect it since they will only hold govenment debt against you.
it depends on what you did. Lets say you do it again when you do have custody will it affect the life of your child? *** In short yes. A ruling judge will reivew past criminal convictions to determin the chance of additional disruptions in the ability to provide care to the child. The court will ask questions like: Does the conviction impact your ability to gain employment or housing? Does your conviction threaten the safety of the child? However, the impact of a past conviction may not be that great if it will not affect your ability to care for the child.
Deb's conviction reinforced federal authority to halt strikes.
Debs's conviction reinforced federal authority to halt strikes
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.
Deb's conviction reinforced federal authority to halt strikes.
Debs's conviction reinforced federal authority to halt strikes
Debs's conviction reinforced federal authority to halt strikes
A criminal conviction does not necessarily mean that you cannot adopt a child. If your conviction had nothing to do with offenses against children or violence then you would still be able to adopt.
Debs's conviction reinforced federal authority to halt strikes
A conviction stays on your record and will affect you for life.
define punishment philosophy and how it can affect the criminal justice post-conviction process