They do time.
he goes to jail
Yes, generally speaking a convicted felon can still travel to other countries; unless there were stipulations with his convictions and sentencing - such as, denial of passport.Added Information: The above is true - insofar as it goes. However, just because a convicted felon is granted the right to be issued a US passport it does not guarantee that a foreign country won't deny them entrance to the country based on their criminal record. a
A convicted felon always remains a convicted felon. That classification NEVER 'goes away. An expunged or sealed record only means that your record is sealed from the view of the general public. It always remains accessible to government agencies, law enforcement and the courts. Any restrictions placed upon you by your status as a convicted felon will always remain in place and will never go away. The only advantage is that the general public will not be able to learn of your past offense.
he goes and has seizuers
No. "Convicted felon in possession of a firearm" is a violation of FEDERAL law (US Code, Title 18) and an expungement in OH has no bearing on your status. (Your criminal history record is always accessible to government agencies.)
It depends on the conditions of probation. Often, a condition of probation is that the felon can't leave the state without permission. Further, another frequent condition of probation is that the felon can't associate with other felons. If you have a document that outlines the conditions of your probation, read it carefully for these conditions. If you don't have the document in question (and I know this probably isn't what you want to hear), ask your probation officer if this is permissible. It's the only way to know for sure.
It goes back into the soil.
It goes back to both houses for approval.
It goes back into space.
It is a dead ball ball goes to other team.
It goes back to the houses. (House of Representative/Senate) It goes back to the houses. (House of Representative/Senate)
It goes back to Congress and back to the house it originally came from.