Yes and No,
No. not legally, resisting arrest is what they say when they have no other charges to pin on you.
but yes as it happens all the time but charges are always dropped
If you were arrested, were you "booked in"? Fingerprints, mug shot, whole bunch of stupid questions, etc. If this was not done, you were not "arrested". Did anyone actually say "You are under arrest."?
Forever. Never leaves you.
She has never been arrested
If you were never arrested there will be no record of it on your criminal history background check at all. If you WERE arrested but the case was dropped or dismissed, the arrest will show up but also the fact that it was dropped/dismissed will also.
That is not possible, you must be arrested, charged and have a trial before you can be convicted of a crime.
Jackie Robinson was arrested and charged with hindering traffic and resisting arrest. He spent one night in jail, where they did not allow him his entitled phone call. He was released after he pleaded not guilty and posted bail. He fought the charges because it was clear to him that the arrest was because of the color of his skin. He felt if he had been white, he would not have been arrested. Without his knowledge, the case came to trial and he was absent. His plea of not guilty was changed to guilty. Robinson was angry, because he had planned to fight the unjust and unfounded charges. He later admitted he got out of trouble because he was an athlete. It was an incident he would never forget.
Yes. Justin Bieber was arrested in Miami Beach, Florida, on January 23, 2014 for DUI, driving on an expired license, and resisting arrest. He has also been charged with vandalism in Brazil and with assaulting a limousine driver in Toronto, Canada.
Chris Brown never arrested her, he just beat her up and HE got arrested. (BTW, he can't arrest her, he's an R&B singer, not a cop.) Do you even know what "arrest" means? :D
It probably will not. However, even if it does, employers are barred from making any employment decisions based on an arrest/charge that did not result in a conviction.
Warrants never expire. It will remain active until it is canceled by the judge or you are arrested.
Yes, it will show that you were arrested and then charged with the crime. But it will show you were never convicted of it.
You probably still have a record, and you should check with the Department of Public Safety and find out for sure. The record will be there until you have it expunged or sealed. Sorry.