All states have some kind of expungement law, some more generous than others. You will have to check your state's law to determine if you qualify or not. Some offenses can never be expunged (e.g.: domestic violence - homicides - sex crimes - crimes against children - etc). After reading the law, if you qualify, you should probably contact an attorney for assistance - this is not a a do-it-yourself project. Also: Federal offenses are not expungable at the state level.
Example sentence - He obeyed all the laws and was a good citizen for ten years and could now request to expunge his record.
Without knowing WHAT the felony offense is, the question cannot b answered. Some felony crimes do not have any statute of limitations.
You can check with your local state laws on this. Most (all?) restrict the number of cases you can expunge to one offense a lifetime.
In Georgia, a DUI will become a felony on the fourth offense within ten years.A DUI becomes a felony in Georgia after the fourth offense within ten years
In Florida, a DUI becomes a felony upon the third offense within ten years.
It not only can, but it will. Felons are prohibited from firearms ownership, period - it doesn't matter if your conviction happened one, ten, fifty, etc years ago.
In Florida, a 3rd or subsequent offense within ten years is a 3rd degree felony. Prior to that the offense is a misdemeanor.
In Michigan a DUI becomes a felony upon the third offense within ten years. Prior convictions are misdemeanors.
The duration of Ten Years Old is 1200.0 seconds.
Ten.
Ten Years Old was created on 1927-03-13.
In Connecticut, a DUI will become a felony upon the third offense within ten years. Prior to that, it is a misdemeanor offense.