Insufficient information is given. If you have been charged but not yet convicted it means the process is undergoing and not subject to the SOL. If you committed the act but have not yet been arrested or charged, then your state's SOL will apply but the state must be known in order to answer, because all states SOL's differ.
Not enough information is given - it depends on the crime and the formal charge.
There is no statute of limitations on a felony drug conviction. You were charged and convicted. It is a part of your record forever.
In Kansas, there is a statute of limitations for a felony with drug conviction. The statute of limitations have a grid that divides crimes by severity level and categorizes defendants by their prior criminal records.
Statute of limitations is based on being charged. And some crimes in Mississippi have no limitation.
In Alabama Arson is a felony. As such there is no statute of limitations.
Depends on the specific felony. Some crimes do not have a statute of limitations (e.g., murder).
There is no statute of limitations for arson in Kentucky. In Ohio, the statute of limitations is 20 years. In Indiana there is no statute of limitations if it is charged as a class A felony, but if charged as a lesser felony the statute is 5 years.
In Alabama that is a felony. There is no statute of limitations.
Yes, there is a statute of limitations for theft in North Carolina. If it is a felony or a malicious misdemeanor, there is no limitation. If it is another type of misdemeanor, it would be two years.
There is NO statute of limitations on felony offenses in North Carolina.
Manslaughter is normally charged as a felony. West Virginia has no statute of limitations for felony charges. They can bring them at anytime during the accused's lifetime.
Question is unclear. Are you asking how long the record of your conviction will remain on file? If so, unless you committed the offense prior to your 18th birthday, a conviction is a permanent record in your adult criminal history record.
in most cases a drug crime means, no chance. call an attorney and try to get the conviction expunged if it was 20+ years ago.