Possibly. Obviously you were found guilty because your 'sentence' was to perform community service. Only if the judge indicated that the charges would be dismissed upon completion of the community service will the record go away. If the judge did not so indicate, then it will remain on your record. Check with the Clerk of The Court for what the record of your court hearing says.
its about doing community service
yes
yes
If you have been ordered by a judge to community service as a condition of probation or a suspended sentence your probation can be violated by your probation officer. In turn if you do not do your community service you are looking at jail time.In most cases you can do 30 days in your county jail but can get as little as 10 days or more time to do community service/pay fines depends on your record and if they hade to bring you to court by local p.d.
Community service allows individuals to give back to their community, develop empathy, and build relationships with others. It can also provide a sense of fulfillment and purpose, as well as opportunities to learn new skills and gain valuable experiences.
Some schools require community service and not doing it they may not graduate. If they have to do it by court order they can go to jail. The last consequence if not doing it would be not learning to care for others.
Felonies will stay on your record for the rest of your life. It will be seen by anyone doing a criminal background check. It is a deterent to doing a crime, that the conviction remains a part of the public record.
Do you think its a good learning experience when doing community service in order to graduate from college?
I doubt it. Many have a criminal record from their youth for instance and that does not stop them from being great parents. So unless she is doing criminal things now you will not get full custody.
Are you asking about a scheduling problem? If your community service conflicts with jury duty, you should speak with the organizer of the community service and request that your time slot be moved. You cannot ignore a jury duty summons.
There is no statute of limitations on a criminal record. Once something is on there it remains there unless the court expunges it. The fact that you were convicted of a crime doesn't go away. It is one of the deterrents to doing crime, the criminal is branded as such for life.
None because its a parade. You're not really doing a service.