In short yes, see below links: http://www.legislature.mi.gov/(S(ptjf32igwq0hhnqn2sjse125))/mileg.aspx?page=GetObject&objectname=mcl-780-621 http://www.legislature.mi.gov/(S(eeczdlnkahz0bu55wvbnon45))/mileg.aspx?page=GetObject&objectname=mcl-750-224f http://www.Michigan.gov/documents/prisoner_rights_broc_77015_7.pdf http://www.michigan.gov/msp/0,1607,7-123-1586_27094-10953--,00.html#INFORMATION_FOR_CPL_HOLDERS
In Ohio, DUI convictions cannot be expunged from your criminal record. The conviction will stay on your record permanently.
Yes, if it is expunged it's like it never happened and will not come up on a background check. this is not true if u live in a state like i do in ohio u have a sealed record that they can still see.
Getting a conviction expunged does not restore your firearms rights. All it does is keep your conviction out of sight to the general public - you still remain a convicted felon, and thus may not own, possess, nor have access to firearms. This is federal law, and does not vary between states.
Your juvenile is sealed to the public, but it never"goes away" and is available to law enforcement, the courts and government agencies.
It takes about one year for a disorderly conduct offense to be removed from your record in Ohio. However, it does not just automatically disappear. An offender must fight the charges for it to be expunged.
A felon may not own, possess, or otherwise control a firearm under federal law. That being said, the state of Ohio will reinstate your gun rights if you have your conviction expunged by the court in which you were convicted.
If it was a valid conviction the entry cannot be removed. In a very specific cases some types of misdemeanors can be excluded from the person's criminal record if they are creating difficulty in that person becoming gainfully employed.
Record-Courier - Ohio - was created in 1830.
In Ohio, assault is a first-degree misdemeanor. Conviction on these charges result in not more than 180-days. A court that sentences an offender to a jail term under this section may permit the offender to serve the sentence in intermittent confinement or may authorize a limited release of the offender.
The Ohio State Buckeyes 2002 Record was 14-0
Judgments in the state of Ohio can stay on your record anywhere from 7-10 years. Generally, they will fall off your record after that.
What is the home record in football for Ohio State since 2002?