Law enforcement - the court system - government agencies - and any employer needing to process you for a security clearance, may have access to your expunged criminal history. All the rest of the general public will not be able to see it.
No, Missouri does not allow explugment to a criminal record
Yes it will. Expunged records are only sealed against access by the PUBLIC.
In California, a felony conviction stays on your criminal record for life unless expunged or pardoned. To obtain a free background check in California, you can request a copy of your own criminal record from the California Department of Justice, however, this may not be an exhaustive background check.
You can try to have your record expunged, but it's not likely. If you were a juvenile, you can possibly have your record sealed. Unless you were wrongly convicted it stays on your record.
Yes, if it is expunged it's like it never happened and will not come up on a background check. this is not true if u live in a state like i do in ohio u have a sealed record that they can still see.
Expunged means removed, therefore the record no longer exist and would not be a factor. If the party had other criminal offenses on record that were not erased then those would appear in background check.
You'd still be limited to whatever jobs you'd be eligible for without an expunged record. An expungement does not relieve you of the conviction - it only makes it less accessible to the general public. It'll still show up on a background check.
It becomes a permanent part of your criminal history record.
A felon with an expunged record can get a dental hygienist license in California. When someone is expunged it is erased so it will not longer be on your record.
No, it won't. An expunged record is ordered removed and destroyed at the local, state, and national level. It becomes as if it never happened. It does take time, however, to accomplish this. You can go to your local police department and ask them to check if the record has been expunged. You may have to pay a small fee for this service, depending on how much of a record search the department has to do.
Probably yes. If your record was, in fact, legally expunged, it means that any record of the arrest/offense no longer exists and it will not be found when doing a background check on you. CAUTION: Don't misunderstand the meaning of 'expunged.' An "expunged" record is NOT the same as having the offfense 'dismissed' or 'pardoned.'
NoExpanded answer: Yes and no. It is never completely erased as if it never happened. The publics access to the expunged portion of your record will be barred. HOWEVER - law enforcement, the courts, and government agencies doing background (or security clearance) checks will always have access to it.