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True, a DUI conviction can have a significant impact not only on your own life, but also on the lives of those around you. It can strain relationships, cause emotional and financial stress, and lead to long-lasting consequences for both you and those connected to you. It is important to recognize and address these effects through seeking support and taking responsibility for your actions.
No- it is impossible to enter the legal profession if you have any criminal record at all in the UK, even if the conviction is spent. It is also very difficult to enter medicine if you have a criminal conviction, though in the latter case it is not impossible if there were mitigating circumstances at the time the offence took place.
No you must first expunge your criminal conviction before applying for a bus driver or limousine driver in New Jersey.
Yes - It is up to the NJ CPA Board to determine whether the conviction affects the ability to become a CPA
If you were an adult when it occurred, yes. It has become a permanent part of yoru criminal history record.
Anyone can study to become a paralegal. The question becomes will a law firm employ you with your criminal record, and if you reside in a state where that profession may be licensed by the state, will they grant you a license?
If you weren't convicted it shouldn't be on your record. You can also go request your own criminal record to be sure.
Unless it occurred prior to your 18th birthday, it will become a permanent part of your adult criminal history record.
Unless the conviction was prior to your 18th birthday (at which age 'juvenile' records become sealed) your criminal record ALWAYS stays with you. It never "goes away."
Unless it occurred prior to your 18th birthday, in which case it would become sealed when you turned 18, it will ALWAYS remain on your record.
NO
Yes, it is possible. Attorneys must be certified by their state's bar as fit to practice law. Part of this fitness evaluation involves an extensive background check, including a criminal history. A prior criminal conviction is not an absolute bar, but would require committee review. The appropriate committee would review the candidate's overall fitness, the facts and history of the criminal conviction, and consider whether or not to allow this person to sit for the bar.