The short answer is that you file a petition for expungement with the Superior Court in the county in which your arrest or trial took place; then the judge decides whether or not to grant it. The long answer is too long for this space, because eligibility of the person and the offense are limited and complex. The procedure also varies depending on the type of offense and whether your trial was in Superior or Municipal Court.
Fortunately, the entire process is explained in detail by Legal Services of New Jersey in a downloadable manual. It's the first related link below. And the New Jersey Judiciary has a complete set of instructions and forms, which is the second related link below.
Some individual county Superior Courts have their own local procedures, which you can find at the third related link. Click that link and scroll down the page to find any links in your county that mention expungement.
Criminal records can be expunged by paying fines, having the case resolved and requested to be expunged with the respected authorities and judicial offices.
Unlike criminal records, drivers records are NOT subject to being expunged. They are a compilation of your cumulative lifetime driving record, and go back to your juvenile years, something even criminal records do not.
From your criminal history records, perhaps. But not from your DMV record. It remains a permanent part of your drivers history.
The use of expunged records, with/without conviction of the accused, will be tantamount to using evidence that does not exist.If the giver of such evidence is unawares that it was expunged, it is the duty of the defendant to point it out. The court has to strike the evidence so presented off the record.If on the other hand, the evidence is purposefully given, with knowledge of the expunging and the knowledge can be proved, the giver can be liable to being accused of concocting evidence, defamation, misusing due process and purposefully misleading the court.Added: If the criminal records you cite existed from BEFORE you had them expunged, the employer may not be liable for anything. The expunction law only guarantees that the PUBLIC records (available via the government) will be expunged. Unless you served the employer with a copy of the expunction order, how could they have possibly known of it. There is no way the government can control any copies of your records which may possibly exist in private hands from prior to the expunction date.
If you are offering them your background for some reason, it would be best that you reveal it yourself. The FDIC, like ALL government agencies, DOES have access to expunged criminal records.
If it was charged as a criminal offense, it may be possible to get it expunged from your criminal history record - HOWEVER - your DMV record will always reflect the charge. DMV records are a running compilation of your entire driving history and not subject to alteration or expunction.
You don't. New state law allows only some types of misdemeanors to be expunged from records. Felonies will be on your criminal history. Always.
The licensing agency for your state will have access to your past criminal records (even if expunged) and it is unlikely they would grant the license. However, you should contact your state licensing agency and ask specifically.
You must petition the court to have your record "expunged." At the hearing you must show the judge good cause why it should be granted.
If the offense occurred after your 18th birtthay, unless expunged, it will permanently remain on your criminal history record.
In short, no. Even if you do all the work yourself, there are costs associated with gathering the necessary records, paperwork, forms, and filing fees.
If your records were officially expunged it means that members of the general public cannot view your past criminal history.HOWEVER - the following organizations still have access to your record: all government agencies - the court system - law enforcement agencies - and organizations doing background investigations for government security clearances.