you cannot practice law as a convicted felon.
I would be happy to rent to someone with felonies - or more correctly, that by itself would not disqualify you - I'm still going to look at who the person is who wants to rent, looking for good renters like I suppose every landlord does.
Just guessing, I'd say that any felony conviction would disqualify the person in question.
The inability to handle EXTREME stress.
No. That's a condition which would disqualify someone from being able to enlist.
no
Felonies are a serious crime, however, everyone needs a second chance. Felonies that happened more than 10 years ago are serious to me but that person shouldn't be penalized forever. I would want to get to know the person by asking what he/she did and how do he/she feel about what he/she did now. I would also ask what he/she has done to stay on a steady track were he/she wont mess up. Bottom line is, everyone needs a second chance.
It shouldn't have any affect. It may be an issue in a job search, but depending on what it was for some employers may over look it.
Any person attempting to use such a card would be guilty of fraud and/or stealing by deceit, both of which are criminal felonies and subject to prosecution.
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Good question! Every Housing Authority has its own rules by which they select tenants to offer assistance to. The general rule of most Housing Authorities are that if you have felony convictions of less than five years than the Housing Authority will reject you. Most housing authorities have rules which ban anyone convicted of drug trafficking, regardless of the age of the conviction. This may also be true of other violent offenses and of any fraud that involved the section 8 program, regardless of age of offense. Now, here are two offenses that, under federal law, will ban anyone from the section 8 program permanently: anyone convicted of manufacturing methamphetamine, and anyone who must register as a sex offender.
Yes, you can, but it depends on what kind of felony you are talking about. In Texas, you are required to fully disclose any felony record on your license application. Failure to do so will automatically suspend your application. Certain types of felonies such as financial crimes, and crimes involving forgery or public deception, etc. would disqualify you for an insurance license in Texas.
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