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.
Yes it will. Expunged records are only sealed against access by the PUBLIC.
No, they're not. When a record is "sealed," it is closed to public access and a court order is required to open it, but the record still exists. "Expunged" means the record has been eliminated completely and no longer exists.
Unclear what is being asked. If you are asking, can the DOT review your expunged criminal record during a pre-employment criminal history search.... yes, they can. An expunged record only prevents the public from accessing your expunged record. Law enforcement, the courts, government agencies and certain private employeers conducting national security clearances can still gain access to it.
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.
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.
Probably not, it depends on a couple of things. Expunged is not the same thing as never existed. Most law enforcement agencies can still access the information. It also depends on what was expunged.
Unless the Court orders the record expunged (destroyed), it is still a part of public record.
Unfamiliar with the term "withdrawn criminal record." If you mean a 'dismissed" charge or an "expunged" charge the answer could be yes and no depending on the circumstances.In a 'dismissal' the charges that you were arrested for will still exist accompanied by the disposition 'dismissed.'An 'expunged' charge will not be accessible to the public to view, but government authorities will always have access to it.
Everything you do goes down on your permanent record. The spit balls you fired at Sally Wisconski have not been expunged from your record.
For each state to get a misdemeanor expunged depends on what the crime was for, how long it has been since your sentence, and if you have paid all your fines and fees. Also remember that just because your record is expunged does not mean it is still not on your record. It just shows that the judge has found you guilty of the charge but you have served all your time and you are making right.
This will remain in your record. You can petition to have your record expunged, which will remove this from your record for employment and commercial purposes. Law enforcement will, however, still have access to the record.