This is going to depend on your state laws. In times past, felons never did get their voting rights back.
check with an Attorney
Have your record expunged or the conviction overturned.
File a petition with the US Attorney for your area.
You have to apply for a pardon first. After that you can must fill out an application to restore your gun rights. The links for both forms are provided below.
If you are a federally convicted felon there is no way. No mechanism exists to restore firearm rights to convicted federal felons.If you are state convicted - it depends entirely on which state you live in and/or which state convicted you. SOME states will restore limited firearm rights - others will not restore them at all.Your best course of action is contact an attorney in your state for consultation.
If you are convicted FEDERAL felon, you can't. If you are convicted state felon, and you qualify you can make application for exopungement. See below link:
Yes, you are still a convicted felon, even after completing probation. You must get the conviction expunged to restore your rights.
You need to find a lawyer who specializes in firearms law to get a correct answer.
For a violation of US federal law, the remedy is a presidential pardon.
Download the form fill it in and print it. Here is a link to the form:http://clerkofcourt.maricopa.gov/eformsondemand/300.pdf
Ask any lawyer you happen to see; They're the ones to ask about the law, in Tennessee.
Too broad a question to be addressed here. You must narrow down the scope of your question as WHAT rights you are referring to, and WHAT state(s) you are interersted in.