The felonies will always remain on your record... however when you are 18 years of age your juvenile record will no longer be available to the public -UNLESS- the felony you committed as a juvenile caused you to be tried as an 'adult.' In that case, the felony offense WOULD show on your adult record.
Until such time as the juvenile becomes an adult. Then, normally, the juvenile's record will be sealed to the public, although government agencies, the courts and law enforcement will still be able to see it.
Most felonies will stay on your record indefinitely.
Felonies NEVER leave your record in any state.
A felony stays on your record until it removed. You can have most felonies expunged from your record and have your civil rights restored.
Felonies typically always will remain on a criminal record unless expunged.
Felonies are forever... Expunging a record is very difficult and very costly.
juvenile is erased at 18, if over 18 then it is forever.
It will always remain on your juvenile record, but when you turn 18 (it can vary depending on your state) it will be sealed to all but law enforcement and the courts.
It will always remain on the juvenile record, but juvenile records are customarily sealed to the general public when the juvnile reaches their 18th birthday.
Until you lturn 18 years of age, at which time your juvenile criminal record is sealed.
A conviction will stay on a defendant's permanent record forever. If it occurred while the defendant was underage, the records will be sealed, however and may be eligible for expungement.
A DUI stays on your record forever unless you can your record sealed or expunged, which isn't likely to happen unless you were a juvenile when you committed the offense.
MISDEMEANOR - If you are a juvenile, it will disappear from your public record when you trun 18. If you are an adult it will always appear on your record. Your criminal record, just like your drivers record, stays with you for life.