If it was a criminal charge, and it was committed after your 18th birthday, it will always appear.
Yes, a charge for harassment can show up on your permanent record, especially if you are convicted. This record can impact future employment opportunities, background checks, and may have other legal consequences.
Every state has an expungement statute and if you qualifyyou may have one offense removed from your record.
Whether or not a harassment violation will go on a record depends on the outcome of the court case. It is up to the judge whether to place the charge on a person's record.
If you were found not guilty, your charge was dismissed, or you were found guilty, the charge will remain on your record until you seek to have it expunged.
A DUI does not go away. It is a criminal offense and as such stays on the driving record forever.
Misdemeanor offenses occurring after your 18th birthday will become a part of your permanent criminal history record.
Unless the offense occurred prior to your 18th birthday, it will always appear on your adult record.
Under the ex post facto rule, you cannot be charged with a criminal offense if it was not a criminal offense at the time you committed it. By the same token, if you committed a criminal offense that has since been repealed (meaning this is no longer a criminal offense) you still are considered having a criminal record for that offense.
Unless the offense occurred prior to your 18th birthday your criminal history is a permanent lifetime record.
Yes, but only IF you and/or your offense qualify. See below link:
It might not, if that was the only offense on your record. BUT - if you are up against someone of equal qualifications that has NOTHING on their record...... you do the math.
If the offense occurred after your 18th birthday, it will always appear on your criminal history.