No. If the expungement was granted it seals that from the publicly accessible portion of your record. That is the whole point of expunction.
The only exception to this would be if you applied for a position with the government. Law enforcement, the courts, and government agenceis still retain the ability to look into your entire background. Upon expungement, it is only private employers who may not access the expunged portion of your record.
No, they cannot.
Wrong. A felony conviction IS a felony conviction. You may be able to get the offense expunged (IF Arizona is one of the few states that will restore your civil rights).
Yes, you are still a convicted felon, even after completing probation. You must get the conviction expunged to restore your rights.
Yes. Any crime for which a Pardon is granted is expunged from your record. It is also generally illegal for any employer, insurer, court or government office to hold against you any conviction for which a Pardon has been given.
No. Expunged only means it's not visible to the general public - it doesn't make your felony conviction go away. You still remain a convicted felon, your felony conviction will show up on any background check done on you, and you can't own, possess, or have access to firearms under federal law.
If you are asking if the felony conviction from Texas will still be a felony conviction in another state, then yes. Once convicted you are marked for life.
No, if it is expunged it is not going to show up in FBI or BCI background check using finger prints. Here are the details, if your felony of mis demeanor is expunged the records will be deleted immediately form the court/state records but the records are going to besealed (not deleted) from the BCI databases. After your finger prints scan one of the following is going to happen: 1. If you have a felony or mis demeanor or conviction but not expunged - it is going to show up in your report no matter what 2. If the felony or mis demeanor is expunged, then the record is still there at the BCI but sealed - so they ma ually release the certificate based on the nature of your employment. If it is governmental, or something involved elderly people or health care the report shows that you had a conviction but expunged.. For any other employment it shows that no records found. Peiople at BCI manually compare this information and release the certificate 3. No felony or mis demeanor then within an hour you will receive a certificate that no records.
Getting a felony expunged doesn't make it go away - it simply limits access to that record. A felon with an expunged record is still a felon, and is still prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or being allowed access to firearms and/or ammunition. That's a federal law, and it does not vary between states.
Yes you can. I guess it varies state to state, but as long as the felony conviction is not a drug distribution charge you should qualify.
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.
(in the US) It depends on whether or not your state medical licensing board will issue you a license due to your felony conviction.
Contact the referral service for your local bar association for an attorney who could specialize in this field. First many departments state on the applications not to list offenses that have been expunged per penal code 1203.4 of the California legal code. Although this does not actually seal the file and is always there, the charge is erased, gone for all intents and purposes. If a potential employer runs a criminal check with DOJ, nothing will appear. This law is only in place for people with one time offenses. The key is to never lie, but if a person's charge is expunged, he is released of all penalties and disabilities pertaining to a crime and is not required to ever list the offense again.Expunged Record of Conviction Defined: Here is the Penal Code Section that is being addressed. If you have questions, visit the State Law Page at: www.leginfo.ca.gov/Some app's ask only if you have a conviction (Misd or Felony) - with expungement you have no conviction, however, it still may show up on the fingerprint check and you will have to defend it, in most cases it is sufficient cause to end the process - & you're out! If the application states do not list expunged records, then do not list the conviction. If your record is a misdemeanor - the DOJ will purge your record after 10 years. If your record is a felony arrest with a misdemeanor conviction through plea or plea bargain, your record will indicate the felony arrest forever regardless of the expungement. If your arrest is a felony, with a felony conviction, the record will show and is not purged regardless of the court's actions. Use good sense, and spend a few bucks with an attorney or expert! Your answer is the key to getting a job.