I have heard that you can...however, i believe you have to have a non-violent 2nd or 3rd degree. I believe you also cannot have had similar charges or new felonies added to your record.
The only way a felony on any level, state or federal can be cleared from a record is if an appellate court overturns a conviction (meaning that an individual should never have been found guilty). If an individual has been found guilty of a felony, it will remain on record for life.
A DUI conviction or any felony conviction becomes a permanent part of the convicted person's criminal record.
You certainly can. If the record was destroyed because of it being a juvenile conviction, you'd be perfectly fine.
No.
It is almost impossible to get a felony off your record. The only way to get a felony conviction off your record is to get a pardon.
Yes.
Permanently. The exceptions are a pardon or expungement granted by the governor of the state in which the person received the felony conviction or the President if it is a federal conviction. Such acts are taken in relation to wrongful conviction. For example, the person being cleared in a retrial or by evidence such as DNA being presented that proves the person inoccent of the crime for which he or she was convicted.
There is no statute of limitations on a felony drug conviction. You were charged and convicted. It is a part of your record forever.
A felony conviction will remain on your 'record' indefinetly, until you have it expunged via Court order.
Many criminal convictions can be cleared from an individual's criminal record. This means, under certain circumstances, an individual may ask the court to erase a conviction from your permanent record, in which case, subsequent courts and law enforcement officials may not have access to certain elements of your criminal past. Not everything can be cleared and there are different steps that you must take in order to have the chance to get your conviction cleared. As a general rule, you must have finished your probation term and not have gotten in anymore trouble with the law before being considered for this.
Question is unclear. Are you asking how long the record of your conviction will remain on file? If so, unless you committed the offense prior to your 18th birthday, a conviction is a permanent record in your adult criminal history record.
Unfortunately to say, you can't