As far as i know, forever and ever.
Criminal records are permanent.
A DUI conviction or any felony conviction becomes a permanent part of the convicted person's criminal record.
It could depend on what kind of criminal record you have. How long a record and how severe the crime(s).
If the offense occurred after you turned 18 it will be a permanent part of your criminal history record.
A conviction of minor in possession in Michigan is a criminal conviction and stays on a person's record forever in Michigan. The only way it won't is if there is a successful motion to set aside the conviction.
Every criminal conviction stays on your record until it is removed. Most crimes, except the most serious felonies, can be removed by having them expunged.
All your days. (Forever) As it does in most countries.
A Federal Conviction stays on your record forever, but if the conviction is over 15 years old, it can't be used against you in a future proceeding to determine criminal history. Larry Levine Owner www.americanprisonconsultants.com
A DUI gives you two records; one criminal and one on your driver's license. Your criminal record is permanent, it will stay there forever unless you have a judge remove it from your record (expunge it). It varies from state-to-state how long the record will stay on your driving history.
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.
Unlike credit records and driving records, criminal records are permanent. If you are committed of a crime, the conviction never "comes off" your record.
A conviction for shoplifting will remain on the Police National Computer (PNC) until the subject has reached at least 100 years of age. The conviction will show on a basic level criminal record check until it is spent and will show on Standard and Enhanced Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS) checks until it is eligible for filtering.