You will have to consult an attorney in Indiana for specifics. In some crimes, expungement is possible. The rules and length of time varies according to where and what the crime was.
See below link for further information:
You may present a petition/motion to the court system requesting the record be expunged and giving good reason why it should be granted. A judge will review your motion and issue a ruling either granting or denying it. CAUTION: Even if it IS granted an expungement is NOT the same as a pardon. You will always remain a convicted felon and subject to all the limitations and restrictions of a convicted felon. The only difference an expungement makes is that the public will not be able to have access to that particular conviction - law enforcement and the courts will.
From the Indiana Expungement law:
4. Who is eligible for an expungement? 1. A person whose criminal charges were not filed or dropped because of no probable cause, mistaken identity, offense not committed. IC 35-38-5.
2. A person whose DNA profile has been included in the Indiana DNA data base and whose conviction on which the authority for inclusion in the Indiana DNA data base was founded has been reversed and the case has been dismissed. IC 10-13-6-18.
3. A person pardoned by the governor. See, STATE v. BERGMAN, 558 N.E.2d 1111 (Ind. App. 1990).
4. Persons charged with juvenile delinquency. IC 31-39-8.
Can a felony form your record be removed in the state of Florida
Not legally...
A felony stays on your record until it removed. You can have most felonies expunged from your record and have your civil rights restored.
It is very difficult to get any felony removed from your record or expunged if you were convicted. It would usually take a pardon.
If you were convicted of a felony, it will be almost impossible to remove from your record-unless there was a major mistake on the court's part.
Felonies are not removed from a criminal record unless the record is expunged.
Yes, by means of expungement - IF you qualify.
Every state has an expungement statute and if you qualifyyou may have one offense removed from your record.
It's usually part of a permanent record. You would have to apply to the courts or government to have the record removed.
Dependiong on the law of the state which convicted you, you MAY be able to get the criminal record expunged, but the DMV record will always remain.
Both misdemeanor and felony criminal offenses remain on your criminal record permanently, unless they are removed, such as by expungement.
Whether or not a felony charge can be removed from the record of a minor is up to a judge. Most judges can close records, but the charge will remain.