It does come back clean, any idea how that worked out ?
once again it is coming back clean !! Like I have no record
My job consist of NCIS background checks
I took a drug case for my husband. He got caught with the drugs and I told the cops it was mine. The courts didnt want me and pleaded with me not to take the case but I was a fool and wouldnt listen. When I plead guilty the judge looked at me and said Im gonna give you 30 days to change your mind then sentenced me to probation which I didnt serve. When the law caught up with me two years later I was on the run from my husband and being moved all around the world. My D. V. counslor contacted the courts and told them what was going on the judge told me I didnt have to come back to court no more just finish paying off the fines when I could. Is there a chance the judge wiped it off my record ?
I have a felony in Illinois I live in another state every background check I’ve had done comes back clean ?
4 Responses to “I have a felony in Illinois I live in another state every background check I’ve had done comes back clean ?”
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no
Everything goes with you, no matter where you move. Databases used for background checks are usually nationwide searches, so I’m afraid it will come back to haunt you.
You need to be clean on your application buddy. You’re supposed to disclose that info up front, aren’t you? If you didn’t you are sure not to get a job!
Yes. Your in a state that does not have a compact with Illinois. A compact state is one that shares felony and misdemeanor convictions with other states.
depends on what you were convicted of and did you do prison time. Prison time gets onto databases, sometimes a conviction with probation and fine doesn’t get onto federal or other state database- just stay in county court records as unclassified offense and disposition- consider it sloppy bookkeeping. SS number and date of birth might not be in Illinois records to be matched with the search request. How long back or how recent was conviction can also influence records- oldest may not have been put on-line and is still on paper at county or state office building, newest- less than year- may still be in process. Spelling of a name may throw things off- Criminal ‘Chris’ may be in records as ‘Kris’, Johnson as Jonson or Jensen. Mexican names are a big problem as English convention has fathers/patronymic as ending name while the Spanish convention had given name, Fathers family name, then Mothers family name- the alias section of record may have variations of name but the full formal name of Mexican is often shortened to incorrect English pattern with mothers name listed as last name. Finger print check is only way to get true record for some traffic arrests- and federal search can take a couple days if equipment isn’t readily available. ** final info given- Quite possible judge changed charge to Misdemeanor and time served/fine paid- no felony charge on record, a possible misdemeanor that might have been purged from records a year after payment of fines. you didn’t do prison time so no record of felony sentance served. no jury trial or conflicted court trial- guilty plea marked as a misdemeanor plea bargain to save courts time probable**