If the application asks if you were ever CHARGED, no, you do not.
HOWEVER - if the application asks if you were ever ARRESTED, if you were arrested for the alleged offense, you must answer yes.
not sure
If you have been indicted for a crime that is a felony, no.
MAYBEH
If you've been charged, but never indicted in over a years time, you really ned to contact an attorney for help in getting the charge dismissed.
Indicted is past tense of the verb to indict, which means to accuse or charge, especially to charge formally of a crime. Example sentences: He was indicted for grand theft auto because he was found in a secluded area with the stolen car. The newspaper article indicted the department head for misuse of funding after discovering that millions had been spent on remodeling his office.
No it is not a felony. But if they do a back ground check they will see the felony and question you about it.
At least five of the mayors of Atlantic City have been indicted on one corruption charge or another. One of them was Bob Levy who pled guilty to defrauding the Veteran's Administration.
A non-proccessed felony charge means 1.) That a person has been accused of a felony crime (one that will result in a minimum of 5 years in prison if convicted) and is awaiting a preliminary hearing, or 2.) A felony charge that was dropped.
if there are no other cases, then NO
When a person is charged with a felony it can be reduced to a misdemeanor charge by the prosecuting attorney.
If it was a federal charge, no. If it was a state charge, and you have never been convicted of any previous felony - perhaps. See below link for further information:
You were indicted, so it is a felony charge and will be held in State Circuit Court (called District Court, in some jurisdictions). If it was a Misdemeanor amount of drugs, an indictment would not have been necessary. Some jurisdictions conduct so-called "drug" courts - but they do not apply in felony cases.