No, a pending charge is not a conviction. However, you will want to mention the charge to the potential employer in some context. They will find out about it, and it is best that you be up front about it.
Yes
by induction
A pending charge will not show up on a background check until you are convicted. A background check will bring up all current convictions.
No, you do not need to touch an object to permanently give it a charge. You can induce a charge on an object through methods like friction, conduction, or induction. This charge can persist on the object even after you remove your contact.
If it involved your arrest, yes, there will be a record of your arrest.
A pending law will not be enforced until passed by whoever is in charge of pending laws. As soon as the law is passed, it will be put into effect and enforced. by deepika (m.b.b.s.)
With a pending charge or a conviction, no. Not in Virginia, nor anywhere else in the United States.
Yes, unless there is a CRIMINAL charge pending against you.
You can permanently charge an electroscope by induction. Place a positively charged rod close to the electroscope without touching it. The electrons in the electroscope will be repelled to the top leaving a positive charge at the bottom. Remove the charged rod, then ground the top of the electroscope. This will transfer the excess electrons to the ground and leave the positive charge at the bottom, effectively permanently charging the electroscope.
Is it a pending charge for a felony or a felony conviction? If so, then no. Not in Texas, nor in any other state.
Convictions- or a charge pending trial- is a disqualifier. Charged, but charge dropped or found not guilty- NOT a disqualifier.