If your offense was serious enough to be elevated to adult court, yes, it will. Otherwise, no.
Yes, a felony charge can still show up on your record even after receiving a first offender pardon. While a pardon may restore certain rights and alleviate some consequences, it does not automatically expunge or erase the record of the felony. The specifics can vary by jurisdiction, so it’s important to check local laws regarding the effects of pardons on criminal records. For complete removal, you may need to seek expungement separately.
After a judgment is made on the case : some cases are age locked and will not show up if the offender was below a certain age.
If you plead nolo contendre 14 years ago, it will show up in a criminal background check. The exemptions fall under the first offender statutes. To get these charges off of your record are to ask the court for an expugement.
Any charge that is dropped does remain on your record as an arrest, if indeed you were arrested for it. It just doesn't show as a conviction.
If it involved your arrest, yes, there will be a record of your arrest.
No. The charges were dismissed.
No, however it will show up as a reduced charge. "Expunged" means that the record will be removed from your publicly accessible record. It never disappears from your official criminal record.
Yes, if you are granted 'first offender treatment' it will only affect your sentence and how you are handled. The fact that you committed the offense, however, will become part of your criminal history. If the offense occurred prior to your 18th birthday it will become sealed to the public upon your turning 18.
A suspended imposition of sentence for a DUI may show up on certain background checks, as it indicates that you were charged with a DUI but that the sentence was deferred pending successful completion of certain terms. It typically remains on your record until the terms of the deferred sentence are completed.
It depends on the actual wording of your charge. If you were charged under a municipal ordnance it MAY not, however, usually such a charge amounts to a misdemeanor which will show up on your adult record
Most likely it will.... but when you turn 18 you can have it expunged Don't worry... Just don't do it again!Additional: The above answer assumes that the question is referring to a juvenile record, and is answered correctly. . . insofar as it goes.However, if you are referring to an ADULT criminal history record - - if the "harassment" charge resulted in a criminal charge or, was escalated into a charge of 'stalking' THAT criminal offense WILL appear on your permanent ADULT criminal history record.
Generally anytime they check your driving record, prior violations will show up on it.