Felony convictions are a permanent part of the convicted person's record. The SOL applicable for a felony charge of forgery (the person is not brought to trial and convicted) is 6 years from the time the person was originally charged.
If it occurred after you turned adult, it will remain a permanent part of your criminal history record.
A lewd conduct charge stays on the California criminal record for the lifetime of the perpetrator. This type of charge and all other charges that were not expunged from a record, remain on the record for life.
Felonies typically always will remain on a criminal record unless expunged.
Any charge that is dropped does remain on your record as an arrest, if indeed you were arrested for it. It just doesn't show as a conviction.
Whether or not a felony charge can be removed from the record of a minor is up to a judge. Most judges can close records, but the charge will remain.
A felony conviction will remain on your 'record' indefinetly, until you have it expunged via Court order.
If you were found not guilty, your charge was dismissed, or you were found guilty, the charge will remain on your record until you seek to have it expunged.
Criminal charges ALWAYS remain on your criminal record. That's why they call it a 'record.' It is a compendium of your entire criminal history.
IN THE U.S. - - Unless the record is "expunged" by legal action, offenses ALWAYS remain on your record. Exception: charges levied against a juvenile are no longer available (except to law enforcement) after they become an 'adult.'
The criminal offense for which you are serving the sentence of probation will always remain on your criminal history record, unless expunged. Your drivers license violation will always remain on your drivers record. Your drivers record is PERMANENT record and cannot be expunged.
If you were an adult when you were charged, the rcord will always remain a permanent part of your criminal history.
Sadly, the arrest stays on your record. The case will show as dismissed.