Any charge will stay on your record until you proceed with an expungement order through the court.
Up to 6 months imprisonment and up to $1,000 fine.
go to the below link, it lists all of the class B misdemeanors
A felony is not a misdemeanor, and a misdemeanor is not a felony.
6 months in prison and $1500 fine
It depends on what the person was convicted for. In the state of Alabama, some misdemeanor convictions can be expunged from a person's record. In other cases, it will be part of the person's permanent record. A lawyer should be consulted to see if an expungement is possible.
In some states, it signifies the most serious of all the Misdemeanor offenses.
As long as you live if you do not file to have it expunged/removed.
Depends on the type of charge; Class A misdemeanor-5yrs, all others-3yrs, multiple Class A convictions-15 yrs, multiple Class B-12 yrs, multiple Class C convictions-6 yrs. At least that is when I know the time lapse required in having them expunged in Utah.
If you committed the offense after your 18th birthday it will remain a permanent part of your criminal history record.
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.
Your criminal record is ALWAYS your record, unless the offense occurred prior to your 18th birthday.
If you are referring to your drivers license record, it will always remain as part of your permanent drivers record.
It does not depend on the state, it depends on the school.
Unless it was committed prior to your 18th birthday, it will always remain a part of your criminal record.
If it was commited after your 18th birthday it will always be a permanent part of your criminal history record.
Unless it occurred before you turned 18, it will become a permanent part of your criminal history record.