Sadly, the arrest stays on your record. The case will show as dismissed.
Yes, when a case is dismissed it will be on the records.
No. Only convictions are recorded on a criminal record. The record of the arrest will remain however, but that is not an indication of guilt, merely that you were arrested.
The record of your arrest and the charge will always remain, but the fact that the charges were dropped will also appear.
no, it will disappear off your record. Because it was dismissed.
No, not if it is dismissed.
Forever.
Yes, but the fact that it was dismissed will also appear.
If you successfully complete diversion (you're eligible if it's your first offense and no one was injured), the conviction gets dismissed after one year. However, the diversion itself will stay on your DMV record for 10 years.
in the state of Oregon, a DUI will stay on your driving record for life. If you do complete a diversion, the charge will be dismissed but the arrest will still stay on your record.
86 years...
The automatic stay is more a term of art. If a case has truly been dismissed and you can verify this online, then the automatic stay was also terminated at that time. Nothing needs to be filed or done on your part. Verify that it was dismissed though.
For the rest of your life unless you get it dismissed by the court.
If you are referring to a dismissal of a criminal charge - the record of your arrest and the charge will always appear on your criminal history record AND ALSO the fact that the charge was dismissed.
That DUI issue depends on the state in which you reside. In some states if a case is dismissed then so will be any reflection on your driving record. In other states, the DUI will stay no matter. Also, it does not matter if you were on public or private property when you got your DUI, you are not supposed to drive under the influence anytime or anywhere.
Not really enough information given in order to answer. Sign an order for what? Affecting who? Who 'dismissed' the judge from the case? If you think the judge issued an improper order AFTER she no longer had jurisdiction over the case, take the order to the judge presently presiding over the case and ask him to "stay" the other judge's order.
Sentences are case specific. Talk to your attorney.
7 years.
If the case is dismissed, for any reason (as opposed to discharged), the stay is ended.