Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Expungement of Criminal Records in Washington State - 7 Steps to Clearing Your record

Expungement of Criminal Records in Washington State - 7 Steps to Clearing Your record

You don't have to be stuck with a criminal conviction on your record. Your Washington State criminal conviction can be expunged if you meet the criteria. And after your conviction is expunged, Washington State law permits you to state you have not been convicted for employment purposes.

Expungement is an often misunderstood term and process. In Washington State expungement of a criminal description or criminal conviction is done by Vacating the Criminal Conviction. The terms Expungement and Vacating are largely interchangeable, the distinction being that Vacating is the legal term.

Expungement of a criminal description by vacating the conviction does not destroy or seal the file. However, it is inherent to destroy, or expunge, an arrest description if the eligibility requirements are met. When an arrest description is expunged, the booking photos and fingerprints are destroyed and removed from the police record.

In Washington State, the expungement process differs between felony and misdemeanor convictions. The following 7 steps are an overview of what is involved.

1. The Required Time period has Passed Since the Case Completed.

The first eligibility requirement to expunge your conviction in Washington State is duct of the required time period. For a misdemeanor, the time period begins to run on the date the case is Closed. For a felony conviction, the time period begins to run on the date a document called a Certificate of dismissal is filed with the court. In both instances, a case is done or a Certificate of dismissal is filed after all the sentence conditions are completed as required.

2. The Conviction is Eligible for Expungement.

Certain convictions, and classifications of convictions, are not eligible for Expungement in Washington State. Generally, class A felonies (the most serious), sex crimes, and violent crimes cannot be expunged in Washington State. Among misdemeanors, Washington State does not permit a Dui conviction to be expunged.

3. You Meet the Clean Behavior Requirement.

Two situations will make your conviction ineligible for expungement. For a misdemeanor, if you were convicted of another crime on a later date then you would not be eligible to have the misdemeanor expunged. For example, if you were convicted of a misdemeanor in 1995, and another crime in 1997, then the 1995 crime would not be eligible to be expunged. For a felony, if you were convicted of another crime after the date the Certificate of dismissal was filed then you cannot expunge the felony.

4. Extra Rule for Misdemeanors.

Washington State has an appealing rule that applies only to misdemeanor convictions. To expunge a misdemeanor, you cannot have had any other conviction expunged (vacated). What this means is if a person has a felony conviction and a misdemeanor conviction, and the person expunged the felony conviction first, then the misdemeanor could no longer be expunged. However, if the misdemeanor was expunged first, and if the misdemeanor conviction occurred before the felony conviction, then the felony could still be expunged.

5. Preparation.

An expungement, or vacation of a criminal conviction, requires a judge to sign a court Order. The court process is begun by filing a request for retrial to Vacate Conviction with the court. Prior to filing the Motion, you should get copies of the Docket and the Judgment & Sentence from the court clerk. You should also accumulate a criminal history report, called a Watch Report, from the Washington State Patrol website.

6. Your Day In Court.

Most Washington State courts want a hearing to Expunge, or Vacate, a criminal conviction. Most courts do not want you to attend if you have a lawyer appearing at the hearing on your behalf. If the preparing has been done properly, then the hearing should go very smoothly and the judge will sign the Court Order Vacating your criminal conviction.

7. Your Criminal description is Cleared.

The court clerk processes the Order and sends a certified copy to the Washington State Patrol, which removes the conviction from the group database. The Fbi description is updated based on the Washington State record. And, if the Order was ready correctly, a copy will also be sent to the police agency that handled the case and your description will also be cleared in their file. Your conviction has now been expunged (vacated), and your criminal description is cleared.

As you can see, you don't have to be stuck with a criminal conviction on your record. It is not difficult to expunge a conviction in Washington State if you meet the uncomplicated criteria. In most cases, these 7 steps take only a few weeks to complete.

Copyright ©2008 Douglas Stratemeyer. All proprietary reserved.


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