your police record never fully goes away. it can be closed at the age of 18, but if somebody really wanted to find your juvenile record, they could. most often, juvenile records are closed at the age of 18. but, depending on the nature of the crimes committed your record could follow you for the rest of your life. its also possible that after a certain number of years, or if you follow certain guidelines such as community service, your record can be expunged.
Perhaps, it depends upon the laws of the state in which the juvenile committed the crime(s) and the classification of said crime(s) (misdemeanor and/or felony). In all states a juvenile's record is sealed by the court when the person reaches the state's age of majority rather than being totally expunged. However, those records can only be accessed via a court order and only when it is of extreme necessity (such as terrorist activity).
Kind Of. It gets sealed. This means employers and such can't find it. Only the police can. And it's semi erased so all they know is that you did something, not what you did.
Another View: Not exactly. Your juvenile record is sealed to members of "the public" but law enforcement, the courts, and government agencies will always be able to have access to it . . . IN ITS ENTIRETY.
It is not 'earased', it simply becomes unavailabe for viewing by the general public. However, law enforcement, the courts, and government agencies will still have access to it.
When you turn 18. !8 is the recognized age for "legally"becoming an adult.
CD-RW
At eighteen, you are an adult! Yes you can move out.
Your CRIMINAL record will be closed to the public once you trun 18 -UNLESS- you were tried as an adult for some crime. Your TRAFFIC and DRIVERS records do not go away however. Your drivers record remains with you throughout your life.
No.
In many states juvenile records are marked confidential after the defendant turns eighteen and are only accessible under certain circumstances; however, the conviction is not "taken off" of your record.
At age eighteen you are beyond adoption, you would become emancipated (in the US).
A VCR (Video Cassette Recorder) uses electromagnets in the record, playback, and erase heads. An erase head can also have a permanent magnet in it.
Accidents never erase from your record. All insurers look at your record for a different amount of time. Typically 3 - 5 years is the time that most insurers care about.
Not by accident. The camcorder will record until there is no more unused memory on the chip, and then will stop recording. If you want to erase the chip and record something else, the camcorder will have a menu or command to format the chip, which will erase all data.
No.No.No.No.
shoot them who gave you the tickket shoot them all
You can't "erase" it, it never 'goes away." But, you can file a motion with the court to have your record 'expunged' so that the charge will not appear on the part of your record accessible by the public. Law enforcement and the courts will still have access to it, however.