It means that whatever records are being referred to had had information removed AND they were sealed.
Reply by Darren Chaker:
To purge is to remove. Consider 'purging' information as deleting it from a database. To seal is to keep from public access, but is available to unseal if the one of very few reasons exist, do in fact exist. Otherwise, the sealed records are sealed forever. In California, the law provides broad power to determine what should be sealed if in the absence of specific law. For example, juvenile records must be sealed and destroyed upon the court granting the petition, adoption records must sealed by statute as well.
Darren Chaker
He has ordered his records sealed from view .
Sunday purged
it means exspunged
Most those records are sealed.
Example sentence - The electronic records may be purged once it is determined the issues with duplicate files have been resolved.
Not erased, but sealed. The sealed record can only be opened under specific circumstances.
You can't medical records are sealed and private.
He paid nothing, since it never happened. This is an internet myth, spread by Donald Trump and some other people who are opposed to the president. Mr. Obama's records are not "sealed"-- which can only be done by a court; Mr. Obama was not involved in a criminal case and thus, his records were not sealed by a judge. In fact, his school records and his medical records are private because they are protected by the same federal law that has protected other presidents: no-one is under any obligation to release such personal records unless they choose to do so. Most presidents have not released those records, and not doing so doesn't mean the person has anything to hide. And it should be noted that President Obama has released a number of other records, including the past six years of his tax returns.
These records are usually - but not always - automatically sealed upon reaching the age of majority (adulthood) in your state. Check with your local state laws on this. INFO: Even when sealed to the public these records are available for review by law enforcement, the courts, and government agencies.
he sealed all of his records. apparently he was worried about what we might find
Yes, they can. The courts, law enforcement, and government agencies are exceptions and are legally capable of viewing sealed or expuinged records.
"Jan is bulimic, so she binged and purged".