Did the offense occur after retirement? Did it occur while you were employed? Did it occur as a result of your employment? (?????) There definitely ARE circumstances under which you COULD lose your pension rights but there is not enough info given in the question to answer it intelligently.
Not if the pension was awarded before the offense and conviction took place. If it can be shown that the offense occurred before the individual retired, in certain cases, the pension CAN be withheld.
the first felony you are convicted of.
Yes, Richard Marcinko was able to receive his military pension after his conviction. Although he was convicted of felony charges in 1992, his military pension was not affected by his criminal record. Military pensions are generally protected from forfeiture unless the service member is convicted of specific offenses related to their military service. Marcinko continued to receive his pension following his release from prison.
Yes. Probation means you were convicted of whatever felony offense you committed. The only difference is that you were allowed to serve your sentence at the courts direction and under the supervison of the Probation Agency instead of behind bars. Convicted is convicted.
Check the below website to determine if you may qualify if you were convicted of a STATE felony offense. However, if you've been convicted of a FEDERAL offense, the state procedure will not help you. Currently there are no effective procedures in place to expunge federal offense.
Check the below website to determine if you may qualify if you were convicted of a STATE felony offense. However, if you've been convicted of a FEDERAL offense, the state procedure will not help you. Currently there are no effective procedures in place to expunge federal offense.
yes
If you were already retired and collecting the pension, no, it won't be stopped. If you committed the crime and were prosecuted before you retired, yes, it can.
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.'
If you were sentenced by a judge to spend time in prison for committing a 'FELONY' offense, you are considered a convicted felon.You could be convicted of a lesser crime, such as a first degree misdemeanor, then be sent to jail/prison and not be considered a convicted felon.A FELON is someone who has committed a felony offense as codified in state or federal law.
If you were charged and convicted of a Misdemeanor offense, yes. If you were charged and convicted of a Felony, no.
If it was a felony offense then, yes, it will appear on your criminal record. It will definitely appear on your DMV drivers record.