Unless you receive a Pardon, or successfully appeal for expungement, that record will stay with you for life. There are legal groups who will do the paperwork for you for a few thousand dollars, but buyer beware, and read the fine print.
Class six felonies can be removed from your record after 1,000 hours of community service and a court appearance. If your name is Greg than the felony is immediately removed. if your name is not Greg, you may have to legally change your name to Greg
Unless it occurred prior to your 18th birthday (and even then SOME felonies will still show up) your criminal record is the entire history of the criminal offenses you have committed. They never 'go away.'
Forever. A felony is not something that 'goes away.' It will always be a part of your police record and will always show up on background checks.
If you are charged as an adult, they are on your record for the rest of your life.
Your criminal history is a permanent record and does not 'go away' after a certain number of years.
Forever.
Forever.
A DUI conviction or any felony conviction becomes a permanent part of the convicted person's criminal record.
Unless you are able to get the court to expunge your record, the felony conviction will stay with you for the rest of your life.
There is no statute of limitations on a felony drug conviction. You were charged and convicted. It is a part of your record forever.
For life.
A felony conviction will remain on your 'record' indefinetly, until you have it expunged via Court order.
A conviction stays on your record and will affect you for life.
Forever. Any charge/conviction will never fall of a record.
Felonies are forever... Expunging a record is very difficult and very costly.
For life, and it won't just be in TN, either.
Question is unclear. Are you asking how long the record of your conviction will remain on file? If so, unless you committed the offense prior to your 18th birthday, a conviction is a permanent record in your adult criminal history record.
Unfortunately, for the rest of your life--unless you are granted a pardon by the governor or the felony is expungable.
yes as long as it wasnt a felony conviction