Any criminal conviction that is obtained by an adult becomes permanent criminal history, although under certain circumstances a judge can remove misdemeanors from an adult's record for specific reasons (such as employment issues). If the misdemeanor conviction pertains to a juvenile and the juvenile was not sentenced under adult guidelines, then the person's records will be expunged or permanently sealed by the court when he or she reaches the age of majority.
If you are referring to your drivers license record, it will always remain as part of your permanent drivers record.
Unless it was committed prior to your 18th birthday, it will always remain a part of your criminal record.
If it occurred after your 18th birthday, it will remain a permanent part of your criminal history record.
It depends on what the person was convicted for. In the state of Alabama, some misdemeanor convictions can be expunged from a person's record. In other cases, it will be part of the person's permanent record. A lawyer should be consulted to see if an expungement is possible.
In some states, it signifies the most serious of all the Misdemeanor offenses.
first offense is a class 1 misdemeanor third offense is a felony
depends on the misdemeanor. For a crime of domestic violence, no.
It will always remain on your juvenile record, but when you turn 18 (it can vary depending on your state) it will be sealed to all but law enforcement and the courts.
It will always remain on the juvenile record, but juvenile records are customarily sealed to the general public when the juvnile reaches their 18th birthday.
The Commonwealth of Virginia considers having an open container a Class 4 misdemeanor. The penalty for a Class 4 misdemeanor is a fine of not more than $250.
Not automaltically. Unless you were convicted before you were 18 years of age it will remain a permanent part of your criminal history record unless, if you qualify, you apply to have it expunged.
Yes even a misdemeanor gives you a record