i was convicted of a theft of a car tax disc 28yrs ago is it now spent
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.
Its the length of sentence that defines when the conviction is spent not the crime. If the sentence was for two and a half years or more it is never spent and always has to be declared. If it was for more than six months but less than two and a half years it is spent after ten years - its different for young offenders - for full details have a look at the related link below. Good Luck
If its been spent, yes.
Until your 18th birthday, and then your juvenile reocrd is sealed to the public.
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.
A felony conviction will remain on your 'record' indefinetly, until you have it expunged via Court order.
how long does a DUI conviction stay on your record in the state of Colorado
I'm not familiar with the term "spent," are you asking until it "goes away?" If so - unless the offense was committed prior to your 18th birthday, your criminal record does not "go away" it is ALWAYS with you - forever.
It depends on the nature of the conviction, the result of the conviction, the rest of the individual's criminal record and the type of criminal record check being performed:Convictions will never be removed from the Police National Computer (PNC) so they will always show on a police check.Once a conviction becomes 'spent', it will no longer show on a Basic criminal record check. It can take up to 7 years for a conviction to become 'spent' and some types of convictions can never be 'spent'.Once a conviction becomes 'protected' it will no longer show on a standard DBS check (CRB checks were replaced by DBS checks in 2012). It can take up to 11 years for a conviction to become 'protected' and some types of convictions can never be 'protected'.Once a conviction becomes 'protected' it will no longer show on an enhanced DBS check unless the police reasonable believe the information is relevant to a recruitment decision.
Your record will reflect the conviction for life or until expunged. Once you have been convicted, no statute of limatiations applies.
After you receive a DUI conviction, there'll be a period of time where your licence will be suspended. You'll have to wait until the end of that suspension period before you can get a CDL. However, if three years have not yet passed between your DUI conviction and present, I would advise you wait on it before upgrading your licence. The points alone from the DUI conviction will make it practically impossible for you to get a CDL driving job for the three years following your conviction.
Until you reach your destination. The actual time spent flying would depend on your departure and arrival points.