Want this question answered?
getting arrested
It usually means that the charges that were made, or the charge that was brought, is not substantiated/supported by the evidence presented.
It means one has been arrested for a crime and then the charges were dropped before the case got to court. Or one has been arrested faced court and was found to be not guilty.
Yes, just because you were detained doesn't mean you are necessarily guilty.
An ex-officio indictment is an indictment presented to a higher court when no committal has occurred for the relevant charges in the indictment.
As a civilian, you do not have the ability to file charges. Charges are filed by a prosecutor. The police and prosecution will arrest and charge individuals, whether the "victim" agrees with it or not.
If you mean that the charges you were arrested on were Nolle Prossed - - the answer may well depend on the judge who granted you diversion in the first place. If they learn of the arrest they may begin to consider you a "bad risk" for the lenient sentence you were given, and they could withdraw the Diversion disposition. Only the judge will be able to answer your question.
Not enough is known about the situation with which to form an answer. YOU, or your attorney, will have to determine under what conditions the charges were dismissed.
what does banking charges mean
No. The car isn't usually impounded anyway, and the fact that they didn't doesn't mean you weren't caught DUI.
That depends what you mean by "the following"; I don't see a list or something.
Anything but severe charges. If by nullified you mean, you were charged and found guilty and it has now ran its course. If you meant Expunged, then yes. I watched people with battery charges and assault charges as they were teens become cops. Attempted murder, murder, possession of a deadly weapon, possession of an illegal deadly weapon, child abuse, child endangerment, or pedophile charges will ALWAYS stop you. Those are felony charges.