It might be a terrorist conviction.
normally it is considered to be the charge on an electron. however quarks come in increments of 1/3 of this charge.
Bcos it contains chemicals tht r positively charged
For practical purposes, planet Earth is often considered as such.
Uncharged, therefor not repelled by positive charge of nucleus.
It is because an atom consists of electrons(negatively charged) and protons(positively charged) and neutrons(no charge), and the no. of electrons and protons are equal. So due to opposite charges between an electron and a proton, an atom has no electric charge or is said to be neutral.
A DUI charge alone is not considered a conviction for jury duty purposes. However, if the DUI charge resulted in a conviction, then it may affect your eligibility for jury duty depending on the laws in your jurisdiction. It's best to check with your local court or jury duty office for specific guidance.
A conviction by plea is where you plea "guilty" or "nolo contendre" (no contest) to a charge. The plea is treated as a conviction of that charge.
You will have to contact your military recruiter for the final answer. I suspect that if there is no record of a conviction, you will make it.
If by fines for a conviction of the charge, yes, a few hundred dollars for the first couple of times. After that, prison happens instead.
She has a conviction of passing the examination. This is a sentence containing the word conviction.
If it was a charge, but there was never a conviction, most states have some type of expunction. If you have a felony conviction, I'm sure all states are different, but where I am, a conviction is there forever.
You don't appeal a charge - you appeal a conviction.
Charge- yes. Conviction- no.
If it's an ongoing felony charge, or a felony conviction, no.
It is highly unlikely.
If you qualify for it, you can petition to have the conviction expunged.
A charge maybe. A conviction, maybe. Depends on the type of conviction it was. If it was reduced to a midsdeamenor and you did the time and paid the punishment, maybe. Depending on the employer and the kind of job you're trying to get.