If an underage drinking citation occurs after you turn 18, then yes, the citation would stay on your record after you turn 21. The only way to avoid a citation being on your record after you turn 18 is to defer it.
It always stays on your record, however the record is sealed to the public after you turn 18.
It depends on your current age. If you are under the age of 18, the ticket will not be on your record once you turn 18. If you are over 18, you will most likely have the ticket on your record indefinitely.
If it occurred prior to your 18th birthday it will become inaccessible to the public after you turn 18. If it occurred as an adult, it will always appear on your record.
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.
The answer is inertia -- An object in motion will stay in motion, an object at rest will stay at rest.
When you turn 18, your moving violations only get erased in WA, if the court decided to wipe them from your record. Some violations may stay in place.
In which state was the drivers license issued?
There's no way of knowing. Once they turn 18, all the records are sealed and no one can research them.
Your criminal history is like your DMV history it never goes away. Exception: Any juvenile criminal record is shielded from public view after you turn age 18.
if you were under 18 at the time its gone when you do turn 18 but if you were already 18 you can pay(lots of money) to have it removed but if you dont it will always be on your record
Crimes committed after you turn 18 become part of your PERMANENT criminal history which is a public record. This record is open to anyone who wants to research your background deeply enough.