That would be one year. Can us use that year to continue your education? That would make it worth it.
No, not until you are actually found guilty of a felony charge, are you actually a convicted felon.
If you have not been convicted, you are NOT a felon.
The ARREST record will still reflect that the arrest was for a felony offense, HOWEVER, if you are asked if you were ever CONVICTED of a felony, you can truthfully answer 'no.'
People arrested for a felony and/or convicted for that felony must give DNA for a criminal database in the state of New Mexico. DNA for a paternity test can only be court ordered in special cases.
Yeah
in your presence the person is actually committing, about to commit a felony
Yes, the only difficulty comes if you have been convicted of a felony, even then, its not a sure disqualification.
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?
That would be up to individual agencies there is no universal rule to it. You will have to ask the agency or agencies that you are interested in.
If you are not using a motor vehicle during the act of evading arrest, it is a Class B Misdemeanor.Evading arrest using a vehicle:If you have never been convicted of evading arrest before, then it is a state jail felony.If you have been convicted of evading arrest before, or someone gets injured because you evaded arrest, then it is a third degree felony.If someone died because you evaded arrest, then it is a second degree felony.
Yes, you have been convicted. Your plea of Nolo Contendre meant that you acknowledged that the state had enough evidence to convict you. PROBATION IS A SENTENCE! Your probation WAS a sentence for the guilty plea. A record of both your arrest and the court disposition does exist.
The best suggestion would be to research the expungement law of the state you were arrested in, to see if you are eligible to have the charge expunged from your record.