Criminal convictions whether misdemeanors or felonies are a permanent part of the convicted person's criminal record and are not subject to expungement. If the person was a juvenile at the time and was not tried and sentenced as an adult then his or her records will be sealed or expunged (depending on the state and the offense) when said person reaches the age of majority for the state in which the violation took place. Some states do have a process whereby some misdemeanor convictions can be deleted from the viewing record for specific reasons, such as employment issues. That must be done through the court where the person was tried and found guilty or entered a guilty plea and was sentenced. As stated above: Each state has a different system. In Texas YOU CAN! get your criminal record sealed or expunged. I did it and want others to know it's possible without paying an attorney $1,000. You can do it by filing a petition and order with the court. You still need some help following the court procedure. But you can do that simply by using a service to help, search on-line as there are a few of them.
All convictions are a permanent part of the person's criminal record.
Criminal convictions remain on your criminal record forever, unless you are able to have them expunged.
Any conviction of a misdemeanor or felony after your 18th birthday will result in an entry on your criminal history record.In the UK, all convictions will count as part of your criminal record, regardless of your age at the time of conviction.
Both misdemeanor and felony criminal offenses remain on your criminal record permanently, unless they are removed, such as by expungement.
Until you have it removed thru the expungement process.It will never auto be removed.
Unless a person goes to go court and tries to have the misdemeanor removed it stays on a person's criminal record forever. If a person is able to have a misdemeanor expunged then it will no longer appear on their record.
All criminal convictions, felony and misdemeanor, stay on your record until you die. After a certain amount of time they no longer effect your insurance etc (if they were moving violations).
No criminal record. No criminal convictions. Clean as an angel's wing.
Call the criminal court where you were convicted and ask the clerk's office.Added: See the below website:
Not unless it specifically asks that. Most job applications that ask about criminal record usually only ask about felony convictions.
You can look into the expungement procedure for criminal offenses in your state to see if you quailify.
A criminal record is PERMANENT.