Life without possibility of parole
You must apply for expungement to the state in which you were convicted, and you must have completely served your sentence or obligation, or be under any kind of supervision.
Criminal offenses never 'expire' even after yo have served your sentence. Once you are convicted your conviction is always included on your public record.
No, a foreign national who commits a felony in the U.S. will be permanently deported after he or she has served the sentence imposed for the criminal conviction.
It depends on whether they were charged with a felony offense, or not. ANY felony crime will deny a convicted person ever possessing a firearm under federal law.
This will entirely depend on how the conviction has ruled out and if you served your sentence and cleared your name of it.
If you are on felony probation it indicates that you have not yet completed the sentence for your offense, meaning that you are not yet eligible to have your record expunged, which means you cannot vote.
If it was an arrest for a felony and not a conviction, the answer should be yes. An arrest should be meaningless. My father was arrested for a felony. It was a case of mistaken identity. A charge is now supposed to mean nothing. If it was a conviction. The answer is, it depends. Of course if a court overturned it on appeal, you are no longer convicted of a felony even if you served 40 years in prison. Your answer is no. Otherwise, It depends on what was the felony for? How long ago did it happen? What state are you in?
It is considered a "wobbler". The district attorney can file either felony or misdemeanor. If a person is sentenced with a felony and does NOT serve State Prison sentence and only county jail time, it is a MISDEMEANOR after the probation time has been served. This is according to 17 (B) 1 of the California Penal Code. If a person is sentenced to prison, then it is charged FELONY with a FELONY conviction. Thank you.
The simple answer is you don't, and it will not matter regardless. If while on parole you are charged with another felony, your parole will be violated, and you will be returned to prison.
No, if the felony is still on your record then you may not posses a firearm!
It is a declarative sentence.
The difference between felony and misdemeanor probation is the felony is when a person is sentence to a jail term, but it can be served out of jail. The misdemeanor probation is not given jail time. They serve a probation period.