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this is considered a felony , so a prison term will be the punishment.
If you can get an American passport, it could happen.
With enough money, lawyers and time, it might happen.
They'll go back to prison. It's a felony in itself for a felon to be in possession of a firearm.
If it's a felony as defined under federal law, it simply does not happen. Doesn't matter what state you're in.
If convicted of a felony- any felony- in any state, you have lost the right to possess a firearm. Federal law.Edit- yes, forever- unless you receive a pardon, or if convicted of a STATE felony, and you apply for and are approved for a restoration of gun rights. Does not happen automatically, time period varies state to state. Federal law is Title 18, section 922.
If it was an arrest for a felony and not a conviction, the answer should be yes. An arrest should be meaningless. My father was arrested for a felony. It was a case of mistaken identity. A charge is now supposed to mean nothing. If it was a conviction. The answer is, it depends. Of course if a court overturned it on appeal, you are no longer convicted of a felony even if you served 40 years in prison. Your answer is no. Otherwise, It depends on what was the felony for? How long ago did it happen? What state are you in?
You could be arrested and charged with felony firearms. If convicted, you could face up to ten years for each bullet and/or weapon in your possession, and serve the sentences consecutively.
Not only can it do so, but it will. Felonies are not like traffic tickets - they don't go away after a certain period of time. A convicted felon is prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or having access to firearms. That's federal law, and it does not vary from state to state.However, if your felony is not a felony under federal law, but only under state law, it might be possible for you to apply for relief of disability. But if you were convicted of something classed as a felony under federal law, it's not going to happen.
Marriage Fraud is a Federal Crime with maximum penalty of five years imprisonment and a fine up to $250,000. It is a felony and anyone convicted of this crime is considered a convicted felon.
It sounds to me like you were convicted and that probation is your sentence. If you fail probation, what would happen? Yes, you need to put it on your application if it is still on your record.
Colorado War happened in 1864.