Only if you successfully complete the terms and requirements of whatever "diversion" program you were sent to participate in. If you do not abide by the terms of the diversion, it will go down as a conviction on your record.
Nolle prossed (NOLE pross'ed) means DISMISSED. Nolle prossed means nolle prosequi, or no prosecuting. This means that the prosecutor decided not to prosecute the case, either because he's not likely to win or because the Defendant completed a pre-trial intervention program. So the case is dismissed.
Technically, a case that is "Nolle Prosequied" is not 'dismissed.' It is not a finding by the prosecutor that the crime never took place. A Nolle Prosequi" is a decision by the prosecutor that (for whatever reason) they choose not to go forward with the prosecution of the offense and the case, therefore, is simply dropped. See: http://definitions.uslegal.com/n/nolle-prosequi/ ". . . . .the entry of a nolle prosequi is not an adjudication on the merits of the prosecution, and the legal protection against double jeopardy will not automatically bar the charges from being brought again in some fashion."
If you mean that the charges you were arrested on were Nolle Prossed - - the answer may well depend on the judge who granted you diversion in the first place. If they learn of the arrest they may begin to consider you a "bad risk" for the lenient sentence you were given, and they could withdraw the Diversion disposition. Only the judge will be able to answer your question.
"Nolle prosequi" is a legal term meaning the prosecution will not pursue the case.
Typically, an arrest that has been nolle prossed (dismissed by the prosecutor) may still appear on a criminal background check. However, the final disposition of the case should indicate that the charges were dismissed. It is recommended to review the background check results carefully and provide an explanation if needed.
The terms are NOT synomymous.A 'dismissal" is issued by a judge and is exactly what the word implies - the charge is dismissed.WHEREAS when a charge is Nolle Prossed it means that the prosecutor (for whatever reason) declines to present it to the court or prosecute it. The charge does not 'go away' and the 'Nolle' is entered in the records as the disposition of the charge.
This sounds like words and phraseology taken from a court file or a disposition sheet which are typically written quickly in a kind of 'shorthand' or a short, brief, and terse fashion, which follows no legal formula.That being said, THIS is how I would interpret it: The court action against the defendant was disposed of (ended/cut short/concluded) because the Prosecutor Nolle Prossed(declined to prosecute) the charge in exchange for the defendant accepting an "alternative" type of remedial action (diversion).
This sounds like words and phraseology taken from a court file or a disposition sheet which are typically written quickly in a kind of 'shorthand' or a short, brief, and terse fashion, which follows no legal formula.That being said, THIS is how I would interpret it: The court action against the defendant was disposed of (ended/cut short/concluded) because the Prosecutor Nolle Prossed(declined to prosecute) the charge in exchange for the defendant accepting an "alternative" type of remedial action (diversion).
in the state of Oregon, a DUI will stay on your driving record for life. If you do complete a diversion, the charge will be dismissed but the arrest will still stay on your record.
If a case is "Nolle Prosequied" by a prosecutor, that is considered a "dropped" case. A dropped case is different from a dismissed case. Only a judge can 'Dismiss" a case.
It means that the judge dismissed your charges. The prosecution will dismiss the charges when they cannot proceed in good faith or they cannot prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt at trial. Usually because there was a problem with a piece of evidence or the availability of a witness. Sometimes cases are dismissed during plea negotiations when a person will plead to one case in exchange for the dismissal of another. Sometimes the evidence unfolds and there is doubt that the person charged is really the one that committed the crime. Be carefeul, just because the judge dismissed your case doesn't mean they can't re-file charges against you, but that rarely happens.Added; Judges DISMISS charges - Prosecutors NOLLE PROSEQUI charges.
Not totally familiar with that exact terminology, but it sounds like you're referring to a Nolle Prosequi.