Criminal Records Expungement
The role, process and reasons for expungement within the criminal background check industry,
along with why it uses and needs the criminal record expungement option.
An expungement proceeding is a legal action in which someone with a criminal conviction record gets approved by a court judge to have their criminal record
sealed or destroyed. The current dictionary definition of an
expungement is “The process by which record of criminal conviction is
destroyed or sealed after the expiration of time."
There is not one universal way to get criminal conviction records
expunged. The laws surrounding expunging records from file are
different from state to state and jurisdiction to jurisdiction. The
process itself is not a criminal proceeding, but a civil action where
the person wishing to eliminate a certain criminal record goes before a
judge as the plaintiff, and then makes a request for their criminal
record to be removed as a public record. Even if the request is
granted the criminal record in question would still exist to certain
government eyes, but would no longer be of public record. To the
person getting the expungement, they can go on as if the criminal
record never existed and legally does not have to tell any future
employer or anyone else about the expunged criminal record. Criminal records
are indeed public records as criminals are not a protected class and
their criminal activity (crimes for which they have been convicted of
in a court of law) remains available to the general public.
Most often, once a criminal record is sealed or expunged, all records
relating to the court case get removed from public record. In many
instances online criminal data providers may still show expunged
records in their repositories. They do of course (by law) have to
delete these records, but must be given notice first. After a judge
has formally expunged a criminal record on an individual, that person
can then legally deny or fail to acknowledge ever having been convicted
with that crime. This means that the person whose record is expunged
can treat the event as if it never occurred.
Eligibility for an expungement of a criminal conviction record
is based on the current law of the jurisdiction/court in which the
criminal record was created. The person to whom the criminal record is
attached to is usually the only one that can petition for an
expungement. In order to qualify for consideration of an expungement
the individual in question must meet certain conditions before a formal
hearing can take place. Here are some general conditions usually in
place in any US State or jurisdiction:
- The seriousness of the offense convicted of and the type of offense committed (felony vs. misdemeanor etc.)
- Completing satisfactorily the terms of any previous sentence
- The amount of past incidents that are on your file
- You must have completed all probation requirements without any incidents
- Satisfying a certain waiting period between the incident and expungement
- Cannot have any incidents that interfere or intersect with the criminal record in question
- Cannot have any other ongoing or pending criminal investigations or proceedings at the time of request
CriminalBackgroundRecords.com gets requests all the time asking to remove criminal conviction records
from its system and to permanently delete them from all source data
feeds containing the criminal record. CriminalBackgroundRecords.com
always complies with these requests as long as they are backed up with
the appropriate legal documents. Only a United States judge can grant
an expungement.
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