If you were found not guilty or the charges were dismissed the record of the arrest and the original charges will show on a background check. In a situation like this you should appy to the court to have the record seale/expunged.
If you have not been convicted, you are NOT a felon.
if there are no other cases, then NO
Yes, a person who has been charged with a felony but not convicted of the crime can be the executor of an estate depending where that person is in the legal process. A person who has been charged with a felony is considered innocent until proven guilty.
If you were charged and convicted of a Misdemeanor offense, yes. If you were charged and convicted of a Felony, no.
If he is only charged with a felony it won't follow him. If he is convicted on a felony it will stay on his record unless he has it expunged.
They are probably sentenced to prison.
There is no statute of limitations on a felony drug conviction. You were charged and convicted. It is a part of your record forever.
NOT if you were charged and convicted of a FELONY.
Convictions- or a charge pending trial- is a disqualifier. Charged, but charge dropped or found not guilty- NOT a disqualifier.
Yes, you were convicted. Probation IS a sentence. Probation is in lieu of (instead of) incarceration.
Yes, a person is still bondable after being charged with an assault. A person is only unable to get bonded if charged with a felony.
Felony convictions are a permanent part of the convicted person's record. The SOL applicable for a felony charge of forgery (the person is not brought to trial and convicted) is 6 years from the time the person was originally charged.