In my opinion, expunged. This will clear your record so it never appears again.
Criminal records can be expunged by paying fines, having the case resolved and requested to be expunged with the respected authorities and judicial offices.
No, these are permanent and confidential records
"Expunged" only applies to court and government maintained records. It does not apply to any records kept or maintained by private organizations or companies.
Should juvenile records be expunged on your 18th birthday? And if so how do you go about getting theses things removed off your permanent record?
Yes it will. Expunged records are only sealed against access by the PUBLIC.
Unlike criminal records, drivers records are NOT subject to being expunged. They are a compilation of your cumulative lifetime driving record, and go back to your juvenile years, something even criminal records do not.
Do you mean a pardon or an expungement? For a pardon you will have to petition the Governor's Office, for an expunction see the below link:
For the perpetrator a pardon for society punishment.
Check with a local lawyer to be sure.In general terms, a sealed record still is a record, just not accessible to the public. Usually, a restoration of gun rights requires that a record be expunged rather than sealed.Another View: In terms of being sealed or expunged it makes little difference. Such records, when sealed or expunged only render them unavailable to members of the general public.The courts, law enforcement, and government agencies always have access rights to these records. You would have to obtain a pardon from the governor of the state in order to qualify.
From your criminal history records, perhaps. But not from your DMV record. It remains a permanent part of your drivers history.
The requirements and the ability to get a DWI/DUI conviction expunged depends on the jurisdiction in which you were convicted. Some states like Texas do not allow DWIs to be expunged or sealed. It is best to contact a lawyer to discuss your options.
If you are offering them your background for some reason, it would be best that you reveal it yourself. The FDIC, like ALL government agencies, DOES have access to expunged criminal records.