Yes, if convicted of both.
There are no set punishments or sentences for criminal offenses. The court must consider relevant law, the facts and circumstances of the offense, and the history of the convicted.
If you are talking about misdemeanors in both instances. Generally, a conviction for domestic assault will be used against you to heighten possible sentences in the future. Most states have statutes that make sentencing "enhanced" for people with prior domestic assualt convictions. For that reason, I would argue it is worse to get convicted of domestic assault.
its differant in every state
if the case was dismissed you were not convicted. you can truthfully answer no.
No. Convicted felons may not own, possess, nor be granted access to firearms.
Not from that information, no.
No
Arrested? Yes. Convicted? Not if the assault was a felony, or against a domestic partner.
The suspect was charged with assault after attacking a pedestrian on the street.
State-operated prisons typically house individuals who have been convicted of state crimes. This may include individuals convicted of offenses such as murder, robbery, burglary, assault, drug offenses, and other crimes that fall under state jurisdiction. State prisoners are serving sentences that exceed a certain length, typically over one year.
it all depends if you really like him than you can but if the assault is really bad then I don't think so
If the abuser was tried and convicted of a felony such as assault, then yes, it will show up in a criminal record. If never convicted, then no.