The state which convicted him.
Yes, only the court system of the state that convicted you has the power.
If you are a federally convicted felon there is no way. No mechanism exists to restore firearm rights to convicted federal felons.If you are state convicted - it depends entirely on which state you live in and/or which state convicted you. SOME states will restore limited firearm rights - others will not restore them at all.Your best course of action is contact an attorney in your state for consultation.
What state are you interested in? Expungement can only be requsted from the state that convicted you (e.g.: If you were convicted in California you can't request expungement from Nevada, etc).
No. A convicted felon cannot hold a shotgun in ANY state. If they have gone thru the process for restoration of rights, and the conviction was for a STATE crime, they could. Federal crime- no restoration of rights possible.
No, a convicted felon loses his rights to vote, hold office, own a fire arm and consort with other convicted felons.
When a person is convicted of a felony in the state of Missouri, they lose many rights that are given to people that are not felons. Examples of rights that are lost include the right to vote, and the right to be in possession of a fire arm.
If you are convicted FEDERAL felon, you can't. If you are convicted state felon, and you qualify you can make application for exopungement. See below link:
Married parents have equal parental rights. File an injunction to have the child returned to the state as soon as possible.
Suspension of the right to own firearms is a Federal matter, not a state matter.
Depends. Serving time does not matter, the conviction does. If you were convicted of a felony violation of Federal law, there is no realistic way to have firearm rights restored. If you were convicted of a violation of state law, there may be. You will need to consult an attorney- process varies state to state.
best to deal with a lawyer in your state.........