Yes, a no trespass order is considered a public record.
Public record remains public record forever, unless something is sealed.
In the U.K. spitting in public is a public order offence and can earn you an £80 fine. Spitting on a person is considered assault, which will earn you a criminal record.
Unless the Court orders the record expunged (destroyed), it is still a part of public record.
To obtain a no trespass order in Georgia, you can file a petition with the local court requesting the order. You will need to provide evidence of the trespassing behavior and explain why you need the order. The court will review your petition and may issue the no trespass order if they find it necessary to protect your property or safety.
In almost all cases a restraining order is a publicly available court record. The ease with with the restraining order could be discovered depends on the level of public access available in the court where the order was issued.
No, a trespass warning does not necessarily have to be signed to be valid. It can still be enforced even if it is not signed by the individual being warned.
Unless the order was issued as a result of a criminal offense, there is no criminality associated with it and it will not appear in any criminal history record. However - inasmuch as it was issued as a court order, ALL court records are considered 'public' records and if someone wanted to go to the trouble of researching it they could locate it. The record of the court order will exist forever. If it WAS issued as a result of a criminal offense, the underlying offense WILL appear on your criminal history record and become a permanent part of it.
You see a watermelon in Mrs. Brown's garden. You want the watermelon. In order to get the watermelon you have to cross Mrs. Brown's yard. To cross her yard you have commit a trespass. Your intent to cross her yard to get to that watermelon is the "intent to trespass."
If it was expunged by court order, the record will not available to the general public. But the 'true' record is still available to the courts, law enforcement, and government agencies.
without the political order the world could be mess
Yes, -unless- under very unusual circumstances a judge may order the record sealed, but very rarely.
Express their veiws