Not automaltically. Unless you were convicted before you were 18 years of age it will remain a permanent part of your criminal history record unless, if you qualify, you apply to have it expunged.
Any charge, misdemeanor or felony, committed after you are 18 stays on your record forever, unless it later expunged, in which case it is no longer visible on your PUBLIC record, but law enforcement agencies can always access it. UNLESS a conviction is overturned and you are later found to be innocent.
Only if the offense occurred prior to your 18th birthday, otherwise ALL criminal acts remain on your record forever. If you qualify, you may wish to look into having the record expunged in your state.
No a misdemeanor does not come off your record automatically after 7 years; you can file to have your criminal history sealed or expunged if you apply for this and are eligible.
A misdemeanor reckless driving ticket comes off most insurance records after 3 years. A reckless driving ticket will usually come off your driving record in about 5 years.
Criminal convictions remain on your criminal record forever, unless you are able to have them expunged.
misdemeanors don't really carry any weight anyway,and if anyone does a record search most likely won't come up,your criminal record is just that it doesn't go away it's your personal record that records everything you've ever done
Without knowing what the specific charge was - it may come down to a question of how serious the offense was that you committed... and how long ago. The only way to learn whether it will affect you or not is to contact the agency of your choice anjd speak with them about it. It may be overlooked - it may not. There's no way of knowing until you ask.
Splinter Cell: Conviction comes out on April 13, 2010 in the U.S.Its Out
This answer will, no doubt, come a bit late, but no conviction will apper on your record until AFTER the court action has taken place.
13 April 2010.
Splinter Cell: Conviction comes out April 13, 2010 for Xbox 360 and PC.
If it wasn't an official criminal arrest and charge, it will not appear on your permanent criminal record. Typically, these types of "warnings" are only kept on file by your local law enforcement agencies to document whether or not they've ever come into contact with you before for the same or similar reason.