Define "infraction." If you are referring to traffic tickets and DMV violations - they do not appear on your criminal history record.
Infractions do not show up on your criminal record because they are not considered a misdemeanor. However, an infraction will appear on your driving record and can be used to revoke your license.
Many criminal convictions can be cleared from an individual's criminal record. This means, under certain circumstances, an individual may ask the court to erase a conviction from your permanent record, in which case, subsequent courts and law enforcement officials may not have access to certain elements of your criminal past. Not everything can be cleared and there are different steps that you must take in order to have the chance to get your conviction cleared. As a general rule, you must have finished your probation term and not have gotten in anymore trouble with the law before being considered for this.
Disorderly Conduct is a misdemeanor criminal offense. Yes, it will appear on your record.
no
No, a criminal record is not the same thing as a criminal complaint. A complaint is an accusation, which may or may not result in a conviction. Only a conviction of a crime will result in a criminal record. If someone has complained about you, that does not in itself make you guilty of a crime.
If you never appeared in court and officially "charged" with an offense, there can be no criminal history record of a conviction.
What is meant by "clean?" Probation(in lieu of jail) IS the sentence for whatever offense you committed. Your criminal record will always show it as a conviction. Simply by completing a term of probation your record is not "cleared" or made "clean."
Then why did you add it to the Traffic Violation and Ticket category? If it is not a traffic violation then it is most likely a minor misdemeanor offense. A misdemeanor is a crime, therefore, it WILL show up on your adult criminal record.
A DUI conviction or any felony conviction becomes a permanent part of the convicted person's criminal record.
It still is on your record, only it does not show up as a conviction, you are just not declared guilty of the offense.
Criminal records are permanent.
To erase or destroy. Regarding criminal records, 'expungement of record' means the removal of a conviction from a person's criminal record.