Your sentence must be satisfactorily and fully completed. An expungement is not automatic. You must present a petition/motion to the court requesting expungement and giving good reason as to why your request should be granted. A judge will consider the case and either grant, or deny, your request. Even if it is granted it is NOT a pardon, you will always reman a convicted felon and subject to all the legal limitations that carries with it. The only thing an expungement does is remove the offense from the PUBLIC record, although law enforcement and the courts will still have access to it.
In Delaware if the embezzlement is a Class A felony, there is not limit. Since this is a Class D, it is set at 5 years.
A Class C felony may not show on a background check if it has been expunged or sealed by a court order. Some states have laws that limit the reporting of certain types of criminal records after a certain period of time has passed, such as juvenile offenses or non-convictions.
There is no limit to reporting of a criminal conviction. Unless you get it expunged, it is there for life.
A class B felony in Arkansas is limited to three years. However, if they have been found guilty, the limit no longer applies.
If it was a Class A felony, there would be no limit. Otherwise there would be a limit of 3 years.
In Delaware if the embezzlement is a Class A felony, there is not limit. Otherwise it is set at 5 years.
In Alabama, felony convictions generally stay on a background check indefinitely. However, some background check companies may adhere to the Fair Credit Reporting Act's guidelines, which limit reporting of convictions to seven years. It is advisable to check with the specific background check provider for accurate information.
Sale of drugs in normally considered a felony. In Tennessee there are 5 levels of felony with a limit of 2 to 15 years depending on the class.
The current limit for small claims in Oregon is $10,000.
I have found a resource that states that the limit for a felony begins at $500 dollars.
That would be a felony in Florida. They have set the limit at three years, unless it is considered a life felony, which has no limit.
In Illinois, a DUI does not become a felony until the third offense.