Eventually people will notice that you have turned around. Unfortunately there isn't any way to clear your record. There must be some reward for the people who have never gone down that road, and some inconvenience for those who have.
If the offense occurred after you turned 18 it will be a permanent part of your criminal history record.
Unless it occurred prior to your 18th birthday, in which case it would become sealed when you turned 18, it will ALWAYS remain on your record.
After conviction and after the completion of his prison sentence he will be turned over to INS. They will hold him until a deportation hearing is heard. He will be scored with his felony and prior record then the judge will decide to deport or let stay. Currently, this can be a very long process because of the case load.
For Adults:A felony conviction will remain on your criminal record for the rest of your life unless your conviction is over turned or exhonerated by the court or you successfully petition the court and show good cause for an expungement of the felony (very rare).. Juviniles that are convicted of a felony have their records sealed at age 18 unless they were tried as an adult in which case the felony charge remains on their adult record..
If it occurred after you turned adult. yes, it will.
none
Being a felon, having the same name as a convicted criminal, have a security clearance in progress, etc..
Yes she did, they wouldnt allow her to record her own songs which is what she wanted to do so she then turned them down.
Turned, turned around, inverted, turned against.
If there is an Alabama warrant for a person, that means the person is wanted in Alabama. If the person is in Florida, the Florida court system would determine whether the person should be extradited to Alabama. A decision to extradite is not a conviction, merely a determination that Alabama has done what is necessary to have the person turned over to Alabama authorities for legal process that probably includes a trial.
If it occurred after you turned adult, it will remain a permanent part of your criminal history record.
West.