To request the expungement of an offense from your STATE (not Federal) criminal record: You must have either been exonerated, acquited, or served the complete term of your sentence - then file a petition/motion with the court setting forth valid reason(s) why your request should be granted. A judge will review your petition and the circumstances of your case and issue a ruling either granting or denying the request. AN EXPUNGEMENT IS NOT A PARDON! Expungement only removes the record of your offense from being available to the public. Law enforcement, the courts, and government agencies will always have access to your actual 'true' record.
Any charge will stay on your record until you proceed with an expungement order through the court.
You will have to be more state-specific. All states have some kind of expungement law, but they are all different.
no it is a class b misdemeanor
A Class A misdemeanor can include incarceration for not more than 1 year with fines up $2,500. A Class B misdemeanor can include jail for not more than 6 months with a fine up to $1,000.
A Class B Misdemeanor in New York is for crimes like prostitution, issuing bad checks, ?æand public lewdness. A Class B Misdemeanor carries fines up to $500.
I believe in most states it is a class B misdemeanor.
Yes, a class c misdemeanor is essentially a traffic violation or the equivalent.
http://blog.austindefense.com/2006/09/articles/class-b-misdemeanor-range-of-punishment-texas-penal-code/ has the answer
Yes, operating a security company without a license in the US is a class B misdemeanor.
A class B misdemeanor is a classification of a crime that is considered to be less serious than a felony, and in the mid-range of offenses charged as misdemeanors. The punishment for a class B misdemeanor is a 1000 dollar fine.
Depends on the court.
10 to 15