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A divorce itself is not typically included on a person's record in the same way that other legal matters like criminal charges or convictions are. However, the fact that someone has been divorced might be publicly available information, especially if it involves court proceedings, but it is not considered a derogatory mark on one's record.
I have lived here for 66 years and there isn't a record of it.
Your CRIMINAL HISTORY consists of every offense you were ever arrested for since your 18th birthday, and a record of all convictions, sentences, and time served (if any).
The current world record is from there. 22 pounds four oz.
No. A felony from any state remains on your record for life.
Georgia Brown is the Guinness World record holder, she apparently reached 8 octaves.
This is a question that cannot be answered by anyone except your prospective future employer. PBJ rules that you have no convictions and states that you can honestly say that you are not a felon and you have no convictions so it shouldn't affect you as long as they don't ask have you ever been arrested. Then that's a different story
No, your driving record, unlike your criminal record, is a never-changing history of your entire driving history from the very first time you ever got your license right up to the present time.
Unlike traffic offenses considered for the purpose of accumulated demerit points or insurance, criminal offenses don't "drop off" your record. Any arrests or convictions are a permanent part of your criminal history, which can be retrieved by any criminal justice agency with a legitimate reason to research it.
the only states his been to is California, Georgia, Tennessee, New York, and Florida
There is no section of the ORC that states convictions ever come off of a driver record. However, an administrative decision is in effect that allows for Driver Abstracts to only reflect the last three years driver record activity. While the convictions will never leave your record, points on your license stay there for 2 years according to dmv.org.
No; it was only ever an album track.