A juvenile misdemeanor is sealed when one turns 18. An adult misdemeanor will always remain on your record.
It will never be sealed unless you apply for expungement.
Depending on the state - some charges are never eligible to be expunged - it sounds like the offense you mention MAY be one of those. You will have to check with your state court system.
Question is too general. Needs to be more specifically worded. What state? Felony or Misdemeanor? What offense? Is the case still under investigation? Is the grand jury involved?
THERE SAFE AS LONG AS THERE NOT IN THE STATE THEY RECIEVED THE DUI
It will always remain on your juvenile record, but when you turn 18 (it can vary depending on your state) it will be sealed to all but law enforcement and the courts.
A conviction will stay on a defendant's permanent record forever. If it occurred while the defendant was underage, the records will be sealed, however and may be eligible for expungement.
misdemeanor bomb threat.
No. An arrest warrant is valid until it is served or cancelled by the court.
It will always remain on the juvenile record, but juvenile records are customarily sealed to the general public when the juvnile reaches their 18th birthday.
Unless you successfully obtain an expunction, it stays on forever.Another View: When you reach the age of majority (adulthood) in your state your juvenile record is sealed to the public.
If you damage property or injure someone a DUI in Florida is a first degree misdemeanor. The penalties for DUI are steeper for each one a person commits. Getting more than 3 DUI's in ten years or 4 at any time is a felony as is causing death.
It can vary depending on a number of factors. If it is enough to be a felony, it could be as long as 5 years in Florida. If it is a misdemeanor it could be 1 or 2 years, again depending on the level of the crime.