See the court you were tried in about getting an expungement.
Added: Every state has a procedure for expunction, but every state's procedure and requirements are different, so no gneralized answer can be given.
However - certain generalities are: There is no such thing as "blanket" expungement - meaning you can never have your entire record wiped clean.
Even if successful at your expungement request USUALLY only ONE offense per lifetime can be expunged, and DMV records, customarily, cannot be expunged as they are a permanent record of your lifetime driving history.
If you are still interested and wish to re-submit your question naming your state, we can refer you to the proper information for that state.
If you are referring to getting a copy of his criminal record - go the department and submit a request for it. It is a public record and you will probably only have topay a small 'administrative' fee. If you are referring to a copy of a police investigation that involves him, it may, or may not, be public record material.
No. Not an actual "written" record.
If you committed a crime and were caught. Go to the police and ask...
9 months
If the police came out and made a report of it then it will be on your driving record. It will be a not-at-fault accident but it will still be on your driving record. If the police did not come out but your insurance knows about it then it will be on your CLUE report and be a not-at-fault accident.
You can go to your local police station and ask for a "Subject Access Form" or alternatively go to your local police forces website and find the form there. There is an admin fee but it will declare what, if anything, is on your criminal record.
yes you can just because your wife has a record does not mean that you become a cop but first go to an academy and get your degree and you are on your way
Call the police anonymously.
7.22 hours after Kobe bryants 61 point record
yes, because their relatives should be in jail if they get out of jail by a police its a crime
Need more info in order to answer question. "Let go" by who, the police after their investigation, or were the charges dropped later by the prosecutor? In either case, the record of your arrest and the disposition of the case will be in your record.
Either get a lawyer and go to court or stop getting tickets.