tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5814961611850189082024-03-19T14:16:09.126-07:00Records Removal Services | Official BlogRecords Removal Services Official Blog. Removal Removal Services Blog and News. Records Removal Services is not a law firm. Records Removal Services also updates criminal databases! "Records Removal Services"Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger28125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-57891749727383849662013-01-12T09:33:00.001-08:002013-01-12T09:35:36.118-08:00Records Removal Services is Closed; Existing clients will still be processedRecords Removal Services stopped accepting new clients in 2012 as a paperwork as processing company.<br />
<br />
--> Existing clients may login at <a href="http://www.recordsremovalservicesclient.com/" target="_blank">www.RecordsRemovalServicesClient.com</a>, or <a href="http://www.rrsclient.com/" target="_blank">www.rrsclient.com</a>.<br />
<br />
Dealing with hostile criminals who refused to participate in their own pardon, expungement, seal, or non-disclosure is no longer Records Removal Services is willing to do. We sincerely apologize to all the people who have written letters to us and sent thank you letters to us. Unfortunately, career criminals who refused to send the proper paperwork resulted in us deciding to close of our own free will.<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.<br />
<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-6819767060119288682012-06-09T11:21:00.000-07:002012-06-09T11:23:37.559-07:00EraseMyRecords.com<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="float: right; margin-left: 1em; text-align: right;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj-pIB8E3zBMe-M3Lkey5ZykQaxHzpobUSv0HVlP5gvlp1SNs1qvfeT0SCY6V2CgJTUNlM9-Ozwtd-EIFbQgO6eXB9oZx19374P_YOWyGxnJMqGKQsWMcysbv2NOc1X_Rcuo68iQPmFyVmw/s1600/erase-my-records-kits-records-removal-services.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj-pIB8E3zBMe-M3Lkey5ZykQaxHzpobUSv0HVlP5gvlp1SNs1qvfeT0SCY6V2CgJTUNlM9-Ozwtd-EIFbQgO6eXB9oZx19374P_YOWyGxnJMqGKQsWMcysbv2NOc1X_Rcuo68iQPmFyVmw/s1600/erase-my-records-kits-records-removal-services.jpg" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Kits at erasemyrecords.com</td></tr>
</tbody></table>
Records Removal Services, the leader in criminal record expungement, will begin offering complete Expungement, Seal, Set-Aside, and Pardon packets for clients who cannot afford our services and would like to attempt to do their own.<br />
<br />
erasemyrecords.com by Records Removal Services will be fully operational by June 10, 2012.<br />
<br />
erasemyrecords.com differs from the normal paperwork processing and criminal database updates Records Removal Services provides; at erasemyrecords.com, you complete the paperwork yourself with <b><span style="color: #990000;">Guaranteed court approved documents complete with complete instructions from erasemyrecords.com!</span></b><br />
<br />
Visit <a href="http://www.erasemyrecords.com/" target="_blank">www.erasemyrecords.com</a> for details. <br />
<br />
> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.<br />
<br />Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-900655493090392782011-10-22T21:22:00.000-07:002011-10-22T21:23:04.399-07:00Records Removal Services - New Colorado Expungement Law<b>The Colorado Legislature has updated expungement laws in the State.</b><br />
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By <a href="http://www.colorado-criminal-lawyer-online.com/2011/08/2011-changes-to-colorado-seali.html">H. Michael Steinberg</a> on August 13, 2011 7:30 PM<br />
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<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjhp38eZxEzS1oQL0gF34vSdmQ0UC3LWz0fzCLwweOWCwjRRR8yW4zPjO08n2Z4Jn_qYyZa13_qMfX2Nnpa4tVZ-wtwqtrW7hoojSqkLdJzlbKip2j73j-xwekViJAgqVJ8NuMJt1n0E0dX/s1600/colorado-flag.gif" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjhp38eZxEzS1oQL0gF34vSdmQ0UC3LWz0fzCLwweOWCwjRRR8yW4zPjO08n2Z4Jn_qYyZa13_qMfX2Nnpa4tVZ-wtwqtrW7hoojSqkLdJzlbKip2j73j-xwekViJAgqVJ8NuMJt1n0E0dX/s1600/colorado-flag.gif" /></a></div><b><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: #990000;">A new Colorado Law will assist people who have been convicted of certain drug crime misdemeanor and drug felonies with expunging / sealing their records</span></b><br />
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The bill amends the process for sealing the record of a criminal conviction under Colorado’s Uniform Controlled Substances Act, reduces the waiting period for certain classes of convictions, and authorizes the process of records sealing for additional classes of convictions. With limited exceptions, the bill applies only to convictions on or after July 1, 2011.<br />
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<b>The New Law: Colorado House Bill 11-1167</b><br />
Sealing criminal records – drug offenses – time periods – district attorney approval – no reporting of sealed convictions – advisement of rights – applicability July 1, 2011.<br />
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This new law – which takes effect on July 1. 2011 amends the petition process for sealing certain drug offense criminal conviction records.<br />
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It Amends the time period the defendant has to wait to petition the court to seal the record which depends on the severity of the offense.<br />
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In order to have the record sealed, the defendant must show the court that he or she has not been convicted of another offense or been charged with another offense since the discharge of the offense for which the defendant is seeking to have sealed.<br />
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<b>District Attorney Can Object and Veto the Process</b><br />
The district attorney has the right to object to the petition or veto the request for all offenses except petty offenses. Also depending on the severity of the offense, the court can:<br />
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(1) immediately order the record sealed,<br />
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or (2) can consider the petition based on established criteria,<br />
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or (3) can hold a hearing to decide the petition.<br />
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The court, in making the decision whether to seal conviction records, considers the privacy interests of the defendant against the public interest in retaining the conviction records as open records.<br />
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Conviction records cannot be sealed if the defendant still owes court-ordered restitution, fines, or fees.<br />
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A defendant who successfully petitions a court for the sealing of conviction records must provide the Colorado bureau of investigation (bureau) and each custodian of the conviction records with a copy of the court’s order to seal the conviction records and pay to the bureau any costs related to the sealing of the conviction records in the custody of the bureau.<br />
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Employers and certain institutions and agencies are prohibited from requiring an applicant to disclose information in sealed conviction records. Law enforcement will report that there are no public records in response to inquiries about sealed criminal conviction records. The office of the state court administrator must post on its web site a list of all petitions to seal conviction records that are filed with a district court.<br />
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The new law also prohibits district court from granting a petition to seal conviction records until at least 30 days following the posting.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh0UvrsNcYuv3KRsvg6asarJuSGHTwZy0mPtXWnXeOV7oVlNS00cKCCtVz-dqR0bHSdSG6S6sD8Xiv1i0e7pQV3Pr9Vqe_keZC92_p5HB35o7OX3wXBICyjE86JRPbhBdtnBuaI0vyxlREl/s1600/Colorado-Capital.gif" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh0UvrsNcYuv3KRsvg6asarJuSGHTwZy0mPtXWnXeOV7oVlNS00cKCCtVz-dqR0bHSdSG6S6sD8Xiv1i0e7pQV3Pr9Vqe_keZC92_p5HB35o7OX3wXBICyjE86JRPbhBdtnBuaI0vyxlREl/s1600/Colorado-Capital.gif" /></a><b><span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: #990000;">Here are THE SPECIFICS OF THE NEW LAW:</span></b><br />
24-72-308.6. sealing of criminal conviction records information<br />
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For offenses involving controlled substances for convictions entered on or after July 1, 2011.<br />
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(1) Definitions. For purposes of this section, “conviction records” means arrest and criminal records information and any records pertaining to a judgment of conviction.<br />
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(2) Sealing of conviction records.<br />
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(A) (i) subject to the Limitations described in subsection (4) of this section, a defendant<br />
may petition the district court of the district in which any conviction records pertaining to the defendant are located for the sealing of the conviction records, except basic identifying<br />
information, if the petition is filed within the time frame described in subparagraph (ii) of this paragraph (a).<br />
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<b>Drug Crimes – Petty Offenses or Class 2 or 3 Misdemeanors (three years)</b><br />
(II) (A) If the offense is a petty offense or a class 2 or 3 Misdemeanor in article 18 of title 18, CRS the petition may be filed three years after the later of the date of the final disposition of all criminal proceedings against the defendant or the release of the defendant from supervision concerning a criminal conviction.<br />
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<b>Drug Crimes – Class 1 Misdemeanors (five years)</b><br />
(B) If the offense is a class 1 misdemeanor in article 18 of Title 18, CRS, the petition may be filed five years after the later of the date of the final disposition of all criminal proceedings against the defendant or the release of the defendant from supervision concerning a criminal conviction.<br />
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<b>Drug Crimes – Class 5 and Class 6 Felonies (seven years)</b><br />
(C) if the offense is a class 5 felony or class 6 felony drug possession offense described in section 18-18-403.5 or 18-18-404, CRS., or section 18-18-405, CRS., as it existed prior to August 11, 2010, the petition may be filed seven years after the later of the date of the final disposition of all criminal proceedings against.<br />
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Posted by Records Removal Services. Credit to the H. Michael Steinberg, Attorney<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-11067409253588874142011-09-24T11:05:00.000-07:002011-09-24T11:06:25.492-07:00Records Removal Services - New Indiana Expungement LawBy: Records Removal Services<br />
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Until July 2011 people convicted of criminal offenses only had the option of a Pardon by the State of Indiana. Now, the Indiana Legislature passed legislation which Governor Mitch Daniels into law and effective July 01, 2011 allows non-violent offenders to have their criminal records sealed for misdemeanor and Class D felonies. <br />
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The new expungement law applies to people who people who after eight (8) years following the completion of their sentence to have their criminal records sealed.<br />
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<blockquote>If granted, an individual would not be required to disclose the conviction on employment applications or any other documents outside of the criminal justice system. Furthermore, it gives ex-offenders the ability to legally state on an application for employment that they have not been convicted or arrested for a crime, removing a large barrier in finding employment.<br />
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"Every legislative session, new laws pass that directly impact the lives of Hoosiers," said Jamal L. Smith, Executive Director of the Indiana Civil Rights Commission. "It's important that we share this information with people so that everyone has a clear understanding of their rights."</blockquote><br />
Even after a seal however, Records Removal Services must still update privately owned criminal databases. <br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-11773293930406705082011-05-02T13:51:00.000-07:002011-05-02T13:53:24.910-07:00Immigrant Rights Group Calls on New York Governor to Extend Pardon Panel<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhq4FsIskV4wtGPrDCZljAwXPealo_d7KXQ8NUZ5-5VvSxQV6ovaThOMRLoni7QYAY6La_-vxrK6IMbtwjxhF7NYlhYokKxV_Fo8NJOUpT0O7ErMqJ9kQIxgr0jQAhYjdzlcARz3D5SCu0w/s1600/new-york-governor.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhq4FsIskV4wtGPrDCZljAwXPealo_d7KXQ8NUZ5-5VvSxQV6ovaThOMRLoni7QYAY6La_-vxrK6IMbtwjxhF7NYlhYokKxV_Fo8NJOUpT0O7ErMqJ9kQIxgr0jQAhYjdzlcARz3D5SCu0w/s1600/new-york-governor.jpg" /></a></div>According to Democracy Now, immigrant rights advocates are calling on New York Governor Andrew Cuomo to formalize and expand an immigration pardon panel established last year under former Governor David Paterson.<br />
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The panel was designed to allow immigrants the opportunity to defend themselves from being deported. Since major changes in immigration laws in 1996, millions of immigrants have been deported for minor crimes and crimes they were already punished for. Mizue Aizeki heads the Northern Manhattan Coalition for Immigrant Rights.<br />
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<b>Power of the Governor <u>or</u> the Governor's Boards and Commissions <i>(the Governor's of all other States have the same authority with the exception of the State of Georgia)</i>:</b><br />
<ul><li>A pardon from the State of New York can prevent deportation or permit reentry to the sovereign State of New York or the United States.</li>
<li>People who wish to service in the New York State Defense Forces (cannot be federalized), the New York National Guard, or any branch of the United States armed forces must have a pardon from the State of New York.</li>
<li>A pardon is also required from the State of New York for people who wish to travel to foreign countries. </li>
</ul><ul></ul><br />
<b>According to democracynow.org:<br />
</b><br />
<blockquote>Mizue Aizeki, Northern Manhattan Coalition for Immigrant Rights: “You’re funneling people into a system where they have no way to get out. It’s a mandatory deportation. And this is a system that needs to be examined very critically, and so we’re calling on Governor Cuomo to institute this pardon panel that would allow at least many immigrants a second chance to be like, 'Look, this is my life. I’ve rehabilitated. Would you please give me another chance?' And I think it’s important to remind people that this is basically a premise of our society: that you should not be punished doubly for something that you’ve already done your time.”</blockquote><br />
Andrew Cuomo assumed the office of Governor at 12:01 a.m. on January 1, 2011, succeeding David Paterson.<b> <span style="color: #990000;">Governor David Paterson granted over 20 pardons before leaving office to prevent deportation alone</span></b><span style="color: #990000;">. </span><br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-34818822015541257352011-02-16T12:35:00.000-08:002011-02-16T12:48:04.371-08:00New Rhode Island and Providence Plantations expungement laws effective<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgad-Jz7_wUrmqiOUmV-QVSmBWWE07zAIpSVNMIPxqcH3fOu35yhOpawSp6mL2-G7VIyFqY6oLvCW74fM2IO70EDx58SSQOjHdBMtGCXu2xyUc4m2p2SqXKVCHlpMqEeyoRpetmvKNxM8F0/s1600/225px-Donald_Carcieri.gif" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgad-Jz7_wUrmqiOUmV-QVSmBWWE07zAIpSVNMIPxqcH3fOu35yhOpawSp6mL2-G7VIyFqY6oLvCW74fM2IO70EDx58SSQOjHdBMtGCXu2xyUc4m2p2SqXKVCHlpMqEeyoRpetmvKNxM8F0/s1600/225px-Donald_Carcieri.gif" /></a></div>Before leaving office, two-term Governor Donald Carcieri (R) <i>(pictured)</i> of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations signed new expungement legislation into law on June 25, 2010.<br />
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The new law allows the Expungement of Deferred Sentences five (5) years after sentencing. In Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, a motion to expunge is required to expunge a Criminal Conviction.<br />
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This law will allow anyone with a Deferred Sentence in Rhode Island and Providence Plantations to expunge their criminal record after 5 years, so long as they remain criminal activity free (not arrest for a criminal offense) during the five (5) year period. <br />
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Previously, Rhode Island and Providence Plantations Courts were regularly allowing the expungement of Deferred Sentences. However, the Supreme Court of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations ruled that a person had to wait 10 years after completion of the Deferred Sentence in order to be eligible for expungement. The new law signed by Governor Donald Carcieri (R) <i>(pictured) </i>essentially nullifies and overturns the Rhode Island and Providence Plantations Supreme Court ruling. <br />
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Every State or Commonwealth has their criminal code and definition of expungement, seal, pardon, or expungement after pardon. In the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantation, expungement is defined as: "Expungement of records and records of conviction" means the sealing and retention of all records of a conviction and/or probation and the removal from active files of all records and information relating to conviction and/or probation. G.S. § 12-1.3-1.<br />
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Like most States, the conviction of a felony may be grounds for revoking or refusing to issue a professional license. Examples include: Private Investigator (R.I. Gen. Laws § 5-5-3(2), Private Security Guard Business (§ 5-5.1-8(a)(3), Pharmacist (§ 5-19-18), and Veterinarian (§ 5-25-14(1) amoung others. <br />
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Rhode Island has a registration requirement for sex offenders. R.I. Gen. Laws § 11-37-16.<br />
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Rhode Island and Providence Plantations was the first of the thirteen original colonies to declare independence from British rule and the last to ratify the United States Constitution.<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-60456472677235133422010-11-16T10:46:00.000-08:002010-11-16T10:46:58.148-08:00New Jersey Supreme Court rules that expungements do not negate bans on public employmentPublic workers who commit crimes are barred from future public employment when the infractions involves their jobs — even if they later have their records expunged, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled on October 27, 2010.<br />
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"When a person is convicted of an offense that 'involves and touches upon' that person's public office, the obligatory forfeiture of public employment provisions of (state law) are triggered," Justice Roberto Rivera-Soto wrote for the majority. Those provisions say a person "shall be forever disqualified from holding any office or position of honor, trust or profit" in the state.<br />
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The case involves a former detective, identified in court papers only as D.H., who worked in the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office from 1985 to 1999. In June 1999, according to the decision, a local employer called and asked D.H. to conduct a criminal background check on a job applicant. D.H. checked the Criminal Justice Information System and found the prospective employee did have an arrest record.<br />
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The following month, representatives from the prosecutor's office and State Police questioned her, and she was charged in September 1999 with the disorderly persons offense of purposeful and unauthorized access of a computer. D.H. pleaded guilty and agreed to forfeit current and future public employment, the decision said.<br />
Considering D.H.’s "unblemished past" and agreement to give up her job, a trial judge sentenced her to pay $110 in costs and penalties.<br />
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In 2008, D.H. sought to have her conviction expunged, according to court papers. In granting her request, a trial court noted "the purpose of expungement is the elimination of the collateral consequences of a criminal conviction imposed upon an otherwise law-abiding citizen," determined forfeiture of public employment was a "collateral consequence" and voided that disqualification as well.<br />
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The state lost an appeal when an appellate panel sided with the trial court. On October 27, 2010, New Jersey's highest court agreed D.H.'s record should be expunged, but a majority of five justices found her disqualification from public employment is a separate matter that stands. Justice Virginia Long dissented, saying the expungement also should have voided D.H.'s disqualification from public employment.<br />
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D.H.’s attorney, Robert Donaher, said his client committed "a minor infraction." He said the computer lookup was done for a "former member of law enforcement."<br />
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"She no longer has a criminal record," Donaher said, noting D.H. had no plans to seek a public-sector job.<br />
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"From a practical standpoint, she's vindicated."<br />
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Judge Edwin Stern did not participate in the case.<br />
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<b>Source:</b> <a href="http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/10/nj_supreme_court_rules_record.html" target="_blank">http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/10/nj_supreme_court_rules_record.html</a><br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-81702184066724115832010-11-08T14:36:00.000-08:002010-11-08T14:36:13.535-08:00Records Removal Services Announces Guarantee and Price PromiseRecords Removal Services, the Leader in Criminal Record Expungement, today announced its Guarantee and Price Promise:<br />
<br />
<b>GUARANTEE:</b> Many items must be certified and obtained in order to your criminal record to be expunged, sealed, set-aside, pardoned, or a non-disclosure successfully filed. These items must come directly from the state of your conviction and is included in your initial paperwork after you enroll.<br />
<br />
Records Removal Services guarantees that you will be provided with the right forms, completed with all of the information both you and the states provide, with correct instructions for filing. Should Records Removal Services fail in any of these If we fail on any of these capacities, we will correct any errors at no additional cost to you!<br />
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* We cannot however guarantee the outcome of your case (your request for relief from your criminal record). Any agency that tells you that an outcome is guaranteed is lying; the decision resides solely with the Court or State Board of Pardons. Records Removal Services will, with information you provide, make a strong argument for relief using our state-of-the-art communications and client service center.<br />
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The Records Removal Services guarantee simply requires that you follow our instructions and provide us with complete and accurate information.<br />
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<b>PRICE PROMISE:</b> Records Removal Services provides services for thousands of dollars below market value.<br />
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Our goal is to remove your criminal record so you may rejoin the workforce, get the loan you applied for, be able to move-in to the apartment or home association neighborhood you deserve and desire.<br />
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No other company or firm can match our secured communication system in our client service center for the price we charge. Records Removal Services will continue to provide excellent services for reasonable prices.<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-56191658878118810212010-11-08T14:08:00.000-08:002010-11-08T18:01:34.878-08:00Why expunge orders are useless unless criminal database companies are updated<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjtI7bjXBAtWb-IlcWMl64RNYX6aBlClyTjn4doIEwapuavMUhXdOm2ebfUg84ml6NILIH6176CX3tCChQL7VBhMvzWA5Vn7G1_UiSwyYOqvmKgVxktidukzENapMzjlNd8A90k91Jl7JXm/s1600/records-removal-services-fbi-source.gif" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjtI7bjXBAtWb-IlcWMl64RNYX6aBlClyTjn4doIEwapuavMUhXdOm2ebfUg84ml6NILIH6176CX3tCChQL7VBhMvzWA5Vn7G1_UiSwyYOqvmKgVxktidukzENapMzjlNd8A90k91Jl7JXm/s1600/records-removal-services-fbi-source.gif" /></a></div>Court records are open to the public. Private companies all over the country collect criminal history and other personal information from court records. These companies store that information on their own computers. In the normal course of things, no one informs these companies when a record is expunged. The courts do not even keep track of who has searched their records. Therefore the information that those companies previously stored can still be reported, not by the court, and not by State or the National Crime Information Center, but by these private companies. <br />
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<a href="http://www.recordsremoval.com/">Records Removal Services</a> provides this service with your expungement order.<br />
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There is no complete solution to this problem. A partial solution exists through Records Removal Services. Reputable companies will remove arrest and conviction information upon notice from Records Removal Services. Companies that refuse to do so expose themselves to civil and criminal penalties.<br />
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Records Removal Services has identified approximately fifty six (56) of these companies. These fifty six or so companies may account for as much as ninety five percent of all private criminal history searches. <br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-67167689085875410302010-10-16T17:55:00.000-07:002010-11-08T17:57:16.662-08:00Second Chance Act (this year called the Fresh Start Act) was presented again in Congress for federal offendersA member of Tennessee's federal representation introduced legislation again this year for federal offenders. This bill would impact federal offenders; the federal government cannot expungement, seal, or pardon state offenses. In a lot of states, the minimum waiting period is two (2) years, but at least someone in Congress is trying to get federal laws passed to remove criminal records for federal offenders. However, Records Removal Services has witnessed this proposed legislation be presented and defeated year after year.<br />
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Congressman Steve Cohen (D - Tennessee - District 9) today introduced the Fresh Start Act, legislation he authored to enable non-violent federal offenders who have served their sentences and who are now law-abiding, productive members of society to have their convictions expunged from their records. Congressman John Conyers (D - Michigan - District 14) is an original co-sponsor of the measure.<br />
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The Congressman unveiled the details of his measure at the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism and Homeland Security hearing on "Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions: Barriers to Reentry for the Formerly Incarcerated." Under Congressman Cohen's bill, to be eligible for expungement an offender can not have committed any other state or federal offense, whether violent or non-violent, and must have met all the terms of his sentence.<br />
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The bill allows the United States Attorney for that District to submit recommendations to the court. However, the bill would exempt sex offenders and those who commit property or financial crimes worth more than $10,000.<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-83190214902395528492010-10-16T17:51:00.000-07:002010-11-08T18:30:24.802-08:00Texas Assistant Principal suspended for failure to disclose criminal history<b>Arlington, TX:</b> A school assistant principal in Texas who exposed alleged wrongdoing in the school that employed him may wind up losing his job due to nondisclosure of his own past.<br />
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A UPI report dated 10/07/2010 relates the story of Joseph Palazzolo, an assistant principal with Arlington Heights High School currently on paid suspension. Palazzolo told UPI that administrators with the school board that has jurisdiction for Arlington High are recommending he be dismissed from his job because Palazzolo, it is alleged, failed to disclose his criminal history when he applied for his job in 2007.<br />
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That criminal history, according to the UPI report, includes a guilty plea to a federal misdemeanor charge in 1997 for failure to pay past-due child support, according to court records cited by the Star-Telegram newspaper of Forth Worth.<br />
<div style="text-align: center;"><br />
</div><div style="text-align: center;"><b>NOTE: </b>Though federal crimes are <u>no more serious than State crimes</u>, the federal government has failed to "<i>catchup</i>" to the States in criminal record seals, expungement, or non-disclosures laws. Currently the federal government offers no way to seal or expunge federal criminal records; only a pardon VIA the United States Pardon Attorney may be an option.</div><br />
For his part, Palazzolo said that in his view the campaign to have him terminated from his Texas labor and employment was borne from his efforts to blow the whistle on alleged wrongdoings.<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-5092443646674982792010-09-27T19:53:00.000-07:002010-11-08T19:56:49.124-08:00Records Removal Services adds Qualification QuestionnaireIn order to qualify people quickly, Records Removal Services has added the a <a href="http://recordsremoval.com/contactus.htm">Qualification Questionnaire</a>. Generally, people who pass the questionnaire qualify immediately for a criminal record expungement, seal, or pardon.<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-86534744348603631042010-05-10T20:08:00.000-07:002010-11-08T20:15:03.233-08:00Ohio Governor Ted Strickland Announces an Unprecedented Number of Clemency (Pardon) Decisions<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhgbrnwoPvhMCKkt7l3-jlco-_tI_zTLtNRLKo8CQx1fnUOBgeJOu-GRyaFefXo_IV0xl8_9M3ounahdgQLty5VwznyT2CqM27tqTUZ0_EkQz43sm5tXF5ls7gd7lcA_YrwQi53FnnSEsiS/s1600/ohio.gif" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhgbrnwoPvhMCKkt7l3-jlco-_tI_zTLtNRLKo8CQx1fnUOBgeJOu-GRyaFefXo_IV0xl8_9M3ounahdgQLty5VwznyT2CqM27tqTUZ0_EkQz43sm5tXF5ls7gd7lcA_YrwQi53FnnSEsiS/s1600/ohio.gif" /></a></div>Most of the Honorable Ted Strickland, Governor of the state of Ohio's favorable clemency decisions are grants of pardon (2005-2006: 29; 2007: 39) associated with comparatively minor and/or non-violent offenses. In every case, these pardons have been granted to individuals who have completed their entire sentence, usually many years ago. Virtually every case involves an individual who has not re-offended with the exception of traffic violations.<br />
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<div style="color: #990000;"><b>The individuals granted pardons today have demonstrated that they have been rehabilitated and have assumed the responsibilities of citizenship.</b></div><br />
<b>Former Governor Bob Taft did not act on 63 clemency requests from 2005 and 2006. So Governor Strickland's staff has been overwhelmed with reviewing all requests.</b><br />
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Ohio Governor Ted Strickland and <a href="http://www.recordsremovalservices.com/2010/11/illinois-governor-pat-quinn-grants.html">Illinois Governor Pat Quinn</a> have granted an unprecedented number of pardons. <br />
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<div style="color: #990000; text-align: center;"><b>PLEASE NOTE THAT EACH STATE IS SOVEREIGN WITH ITS OWN CONSTITUTION AND LAWS. IN GEORGIA FOR EXAMPLE, THE GOVERNOR HAS ABSOLUTELY NO PARDON AUTHORITY.</b></div><br />
<b>Ohio Governor Strickland has already begun his review of the 177 recommendations received from the Parole Board during 2008, after which he will turn to the 226 recommendations already received in 2009.</b><br />
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<blockquote>"I believe the clemency power should be used judiciously to give a second chance to those who have demonstrated they deserve it, and to modify the unusually long sentence that is out of sync with the norm," Strickland said. "I do not intend my clemency decisions to be seen as a determination that mistakes were made by judges, prosecutors, police officers or others in the criminal justice system. These decisions are another part of the overall system of justice that attempts to hold individuals responsible for their behavior while recognizing that ours is a society able to forgive, and welcome back, those who demonstrate they have earned, and can responsibly handle, society's mercy and forgiveness."</blockquote><br />
<u><b>Ohio Governor's Constitutional Clemency Authority and Pardon Process:</b></u><br />
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The Ohio Parole Board and Governor Strickland consider applications for two forms of clemency: commutations and pardons. A commutation is the change of a legal punishment for the commission of a crime to a lesser punishment. A pardon is a complete forgiveness for a crime committed, eliminating all penalties and other legal consequences for the commission of a crime. An individual granted a full and unconditional pardon is deemed, by law, to have never committed the offense.<br />
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The Ohio Constitution authorizes Ohio's governor to grant pardons and commutations "for all crimes and offenses, except treason and cases of impeachment" (Article III, Section 11). Under Ohio law, the governor may only grant a pardon or commutation after the adult parole authority has received a clemency application and the parole authority has provided a written recommendation to the governor. The governor may follow or reject the parole authority's recommendation.<br />
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The governor's legal staff review of each parole board recommendation includes, but is not limited to: communication with the court and the prosecutor's office involved in the conviction; input and assistance from law enforcement officials, defense counsel, witnesses, victims and others who may have information relevant to the governor's decisions; consultation of official records from the offender's prosecution and appeals, the parole board's report and exhibits, petitions, letters, media reports and other documents or materials concerning the case.<br />
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The legal counsel prepares these findings for the governor's review, initially shielding their clemency recommendations at the governor's request. After a thorough and detailed discussion of the specifics of a given case, the legal staff presents their recommendation for or against clemency. The governor considers the totality of information presented for each application and decides whether to approve or deny clemency.<br />
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The governor's office estimates that in excess of 1,000 person hours have been spent reviewing the cases announced today. <br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-35923556427605338352010-04-22T20:03:00.000-07:002010-11-08T20:07:22.737-08:00Illinois Governor Pat Quinn grants a massive amount of pardons<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiKiqKznUAUq73XoWBVZBK2uEdlOUqbe5l6TqaW8o6NuUcLsBWtHs6ETIFrKSl_u4VmaRPoDWYqB03EQJ6zAQP1laDK7wy3uLw7Lp7gFwwdQRjDmFTlbJwDEYChCt3MCIQ_xXQT8QPxAyH6/s1600/Pat_quinn_governor_of_illinois.png" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiKiqKznUAUq73XoWBVZBK2uEdlOUqbe5l6TqaW8o6NuUcLsBWtHs6ETIFrKSl_u4VmaRPoDWYqB03EQJ6zAQP1laDK7wy3uLw7Lp7gFwwdQRjDmFTlbJwDEYChCt3MCIQ_xXQT8QPxAyH6/s1600/Pat_quinn_governor_of_illinois.png" /></a></div>Illinois Governor Pat Quinn granted pardons to 147 people convicted of low-level crimes in April 2010! The Governor granted 147 of 407 requested.<br />
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<blockquote>People who have been convicted of murder, violent crimes, sex crimes are typically automatically disqualified by both Records Removal Services and the Board of Pardons (sometimes called the Board of Pardons and Parole).</blockquote><br />
Since Governor Quinn was sworn into office on January 29, 2009, he has decided on 769 Petitions, <b>granting a total of 321 Petitions</b>.<br />
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<b>Plus, Governor Quinn has his own pile, making the total pending Petitions to be around 2450, according to a spokesman in the Governor's Communications Office. </b><br />
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<div style="color: #990000;"><b>Governor Quinn is using his exclusive power to the benefit of the most deserving people, granting almost 42% of the Petitions thus far:</b></div><br />
<blockquote>"Our society brands the felon with a Scarlet Letter for the rest of his or her lifetime. Essentially, once a felon, always a felon. This is wrong. This is not forgiveness. This is not mercy. Yes, people must understand that consequences come with illegal acts. But every person who was convicted of a crime, was sentenced and served a sentence, whether probation or prison. A lifetime punishment is harmful to society as a whole.<br />
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Rehabilitation must be encouraged in our society. The kid who gets caught selling dope at 18-years old should not be labeled a "convicted felon" for the rest of his life if he can prove he is a contributing member of society. If he has gone to school, purchased a home, raised a family, why should he continue to be punished?<br />
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A pardon gives the deserving person an opportunity to remove the "convicted felon" tattoo. The pardon allows for the deserving person to apply for a better job so that he or she can support his family. Rehabilitation must be rewarded." - <b>Tamara N. Holder</b>, Illinois Attorney, Legal and Political Commentator</blockquote><br />
<div style="color: #666666;"><b><u>Tamara N. Holder</u></b>, Illinois defense and civil rights attorney/legal and political commentator contributed to his article from her commentator blog. </div><br />
<div style="color: #990000;"><b>Pardon power in the State of Illinois is vested in the Governor, who is assisted by recommendations of the Prisoner Review Board. </b></div><br />
<div style="text-align: center;"><u><b>NOTE:</b></u> With each U.S. state being sovereign however, <u>each state</u> has their <u>own constitution and laws</u>. In the State of Georgia for example, the Governor is prohibited from being involved in pardons and pardon power is vested exclusively in the Georgia Board of Pardons and Parole. </div><br />
> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-87802952491457915822010-03-29T20:15:00.000-07:002010-11-09T10:48:45.650-08:00New Jersey Governor Chris Christie signs new legislation broadening the state's expungement statute<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjWz4vgCJj8o4tpLrf2Bu6JXvsnTKjMGyuDMafyO7rG2rvdoJNesqc9OyL4RIFGlqH5-N6RaWCQGhYw-_DWBfgWZcgSSF6KZkCVSCRYgYiVLwFqbQDrNJPw48RieKMyT2tM285Wqqrm-x8V/s1600/800px-New_Jersey_State_House.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjWz4vgCJj8o4tpLrf2Bu6JXvsnTKjMGyuDMafyO7rG2rvdoJNesqc9OyL4RIFGlqH5-N6RaWCQGhYw-_DWBfgWZcgSSF6KZkCVSCRYgYiVLwFqbQDrNJPw48RieKMyT2tM285Wqqrm-x8V/s1600/800px-New_Jersey_State_House.jpg" /></a></div>The Honorable Chris Christie, Governor of the State of New Jersey recently signed new legislation broadening the state's expungement statute. Governor Christie signed the legislation into law after it passed both houses of the New Jersey Legislature; the General Assembly and the Senate earlier this year.<br />
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<b>CHANGES TO NEW JERSEY EXPUNGEMENT LAWS:</b><br />
<ul><li>Citizens with convictions for third or fourth degree drug distribution convictions on their record may be expunged.</li>
</ul><ul><li>The new legislation also reduces waiting periods for the expungement of indictable (felony) convictions. Under the old law, a citizen had to wait until 10 years had passed. Under the new expungement statute, certain indictable convictions will be eligible for consideration after a period of 5 years. There will be a series of factors that the court will consider when deciding if an early expungement should be granted. <b>The important thing is the application can be filed, in most cases, 5 years earlier than before.</b></li>
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The changes to New Jersey's expungement laws include other provisions, but the ones listed above are the most beneficial for people who need an expungement. For additional information, contact Records Removal Services today! Don't let your criminal history haunt you for the rest of your life!<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-6132886509569788122009-11-08T13:46:00.000-08:002010-11-08T14:10:48.882-08:00What do states owe the exonerated?<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnQDhb280hJECosW5qrrjA_cDda39RLQbGPohqmN7qiJLcJwjmXRIjzdOligPGPAHM16w58x6tuEEpR_QFTcheKD-5z3GlmKrW-KlPPRChMO6nLuhAwlBvlpBeFQgFJIKf3azjcRxlm2wL/s1600/csmlogo.gif" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnQDhb280hJECosW5qrrjA_cDda39RLQbGPohqmN7qiJLcJwjmXRIjzdOligPGPAHM16w58x6tuEEpR_QFTcheKD-5z3GlmKrW-KlPPRChMO6nLuhAwlBvlpBeFQgFJIKf3azjcRxlm2wL/s1600/csmlogo.gif" /></a></div>This month, two men – both freed last year after DNA evidence exonerated them of the crimes for which they'd been in prison – received drastically different news about how they might be compensated for those lost years.<br />
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Connecticut legislators voted to award $5 million to James Tillman to help him get his life back on track after 18 years behind bars for a rape he didn't commit.<br />
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The Florida Legislature, on the other hand, denied Alan Crotzer's request for $1.25 million and let a bill die that would have standardized a compensation system for victims of wrongful conviction.<br />
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"I felt so disappointed," says Mr. Crotzer, who served more than 24 years in a Florida prison until DNA evidence cleared him of rape and kidnapping charges. He's been working odd jobs that pay less than $300 a week since he got out. "The bottom line is, I don't think I could ever put a price on freedom…. But they've got to put a system in place. [This issue] isn't going away."<br />
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Last month, the 200th person was exonerated due to DNA evidence, but the majority of those released have gotten nothing but an apology – and sometimes not even that.<br />
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"We are exonerating people who did not commit crimes, spent two decades in prison or time on death row, and when they get out, there are fewer reentry services for these people than for individuals who actually committed crimes," says Barry Scheck, codirector of the Innocence Project at Yeshiva University's Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, which is dedicated to exonerating the wrongfully convicted. "It's a measure of decency."<br />
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As DNA exonerations become more plentiful – and more publicized – some states are moving on the compensation front. Of the 200 men who have been exonerated based on DNA evidence, about 45 percent have received some sort of compensation, according to the Innocence Project, with amounts that range from $25,000 to $12.2 million.<br />
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Twenty-one states, along with the federal government and the District of Columbia, now have standardized compensation laws on the books – offering exonerees amounts ranging from $15,000 total to $50,000 per year of imprisonment. Thirteen states have introduced bills this year to either create or improve compensation for the wrongfully convicted. Some of those bills, like the one that gave Mr. Tillman $5 million, dealt only with individual prisoners, but other states are trying to standardize the compensation.<br />
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Crotzer – as much as he would have liked to see his own petition for compensation filled – favors the latter, as do most advocates of the wrongfully convicted. "It's like I've got my hand out begging," he says of the process he went through. "It makes me feel bad."<br />
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Texas, where 13 men have been exonerated in Dallas County alone, is considering a package of bills that would, among other things, raise the compensation amount from $25,000 to $50,000 per year of incarceration.<br />
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Vermont – which hasn't yet had a prisoner exonerated by DNA evidence – has passed a comprehensive bill that would provide between $30,000 and $60,000 per year of incarceration as well as access to healthcare and reintegration services. It's currently awaiting the governor's signature.<br />
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That's a trend that advocates at the Innocence Project hope they see more of. They note that in addition to monetary compensation, most of the wrongfully convicted leave prison with few skills and desperately need access to education, mental-health services, medical care, and job training. Currently, most exonerees don't even have access to the same sort of services that parolees get, since they're not being paroled.<br />
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"In Florida, if you're a parolee they give you $100 and a bus ticket," says Michael Olenick, the Tallahassee attorney who represented Crotzer pro bono. "Al Crotzer got no bus ticket, and no $100."<br />
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He also didn't get access to counseling, and he says he's struggled with some things since his release: He still wants to turn his light off at 11:47 every night, for instance, and he keeps everything in his room neat enough to pass a cell inspection.<br />
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Crotzer recently married a woman with two children and has worked a series of low-skill jobs ranging from street cleaning to janitorial duties. He's in the process of moving to Tallahassee, where he has an offer to work as a dishwasher. But he's hoping for a job at a nearby sheriff's office working with at-risk youth, and he's trying to stay sanguine about it all. "I kept my self-respect by not becoming the monster they wanted me to be," he says of his years in prison.<br />
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Neither Mr. Olenick nor Crotzer can be sure why the request for $1.25 million failed, especially after the Florida House unanimously approved it. Senate leaders said they didn't have the money – a common reason that states cite in not providing compensation. In Crotzer's case, some also suggested that lawmakers didn't want to grant any more individual compensation bills, but instead wanted to pass a "global" bill that would address all cases. However, the three such bills that were introduced in past years didn't go anywhere.<br />
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Some believe Crotzer may also have been hurt by the fact that he was convicted of a beer store robbery when he was 18 – a fact that would have excluded him from compensation under one of the laws proposed in Florida.<br />
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Olenick says he'll keep fighting and will refile the claim for next year's session. "When you handle a case like Al's, he becomes locked in your heart," Olenick says. "Until he gets compensated, I'm not going to stop."<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-63353007773478012092009-04-20T19:40:00.000-07:002010-11-08T20:21:40.855-08:00Alabama expungement law proposed (currently Alabama has no expungement law)A bill that would allow expungement of criminal records under certain circumstances and if specific criteria are met is one step closer to becoming law.<br />
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The bill, <a href="http://alabama2009legislativesession.blogspot.com/2009/04/expungement-bill-passes-house.html">HB 59 sponsored by Rep. Chris England of Tuscaloosa</a>, "would authorize a person charged or convicted of certain felony or misdemeanor criminal offenses, a violation, or a traffic violation to petition the court in which the charges where filed or in which the conviction occurred to have his or her records expunged, including, but not limited to, arrest records, fingerprints, photographs, or index references in documentary or electronic form, relating to the arrest or charge, or both, and conviction in certain instances."<br />
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Depending on the type of conviction an individual received determines the criteria that must be met in order to have a record expunged. If an individual has been convicted of a violent crime (capital murder, murder, rape in the first degree, manslaughter, attempted murder, sodomy in the first degree, and etc.), he / she does not qualify for expungement under this bill.<br />
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HB 59 now goes to the Senate for consideration; however, if the filibuster continues, most likely, no further movement on this bill will take place this legislative session.<br />
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<div style="text-align: center;"><b>Note:</b> The State of Alabama did perform criminal record seals/expungements. However, the Alabama Supreme Court ordered the sealed/expunged records re-opened citing the Judges who orders the criminal record seals and expungements lack legislative authority. </div><br />
> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-40793868077033246062008-09-18T14:29:00.000-07:002010-11-08T20:31:04.262-08:00State of Wyoming and the federal government continue court battleA federal appeals court in Denver has ruled against Wyoming in a lawsuit over a state law that seeks to allow people convicted of misdemeanor domestic violence to regain their gun rights.<br />
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A three-judge panel of the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Tuesday ruled that the procedure spelled out in Wyoming law fails to expunge the criminal record of people convicted of domestic violence.<br />
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The ruling is a victory for the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. The agency had informed Wyoming that if it persisted in using the state law, the federal government would no longer accept Wyoming concealed weapons permits as a substitute for instant background checks for gun purchases.<br />
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Wyoming Attorney General Bruce Salzburg said Wednesday that he's unlikely to suggest that the state ask the U.S. Supreme Court to review the case.<br />
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"We now have two federal courts that have rejected Wyoming's position," Salzburg said, adding that the Supreme Court reviews only a small number of cases.<br />
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Salzburg said his office planned to put out a statement on Wednesday advising people who have gone through the procedure to expunge their misdemeanor records of the court's decision. He said the ruling means that if such people now have guns, they "may be viewed by federal authorities as being in violation of federal firearms law."<br />
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The U.S. Department of Justice Civil Division in Washington represented the BATF in the lawsuit. Charles Miller, spokesman for the division, said Wednesday the office had no comment on the ruling.<br />
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The 2004 Wyoming law at the center of the lawsuit allows people convicted of misdemeanor domestic violence to petition in state court to expunge their conviction and restore their gun rights. The law requires that petitioners must have completed probation, and it limits people to just one such request.<br />
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The Wyoming Attorney General's Office said last year that Wyoming courts expunged 63 misdemeanor convictions from 2005 through last October. Salzburg said Wednesday that only one person with an expunged record had gone on to receive a state-issued concealed weapons permit and said at least two other such applications are pending.<br />
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The BATF objected to a provision of the state law that specified that an "expunged" conviction would be kept by the state Division of Criminal Investigation and could be used to enhance penalties for future domestic violence convictions. The BATF said that conviction records weren't truly expunged if they were kept on the books for any purpose.<br />
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Federal law requires gun dealers to perform an instant background check of prospective purchasers through a national database unless the buyer has a state-issued concealed weapon permit. The BATF said Wyoming's law could allow people to get a concealed weapons permit even though they wouldn't qualify under federal standards.<br />
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Wyoming sued the BATF over its threat to reject all Wyoming-issued concealed carry permits as a substitute for background checks. In May 2007, U.S. District Judge Alan Johnson of Wyoming rejected the state's claims that the federal agency had arbitrarily rejected the state law.<br />
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The state's lawsuit has attracted national attention from groups on both sides of the gun-control debate at both the federal district court and appellate court levels.<br />
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Daniel Vice, senior attorney for the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence in Washington said Wednesday his group regards Tuesday's appeals court ruling as a victory for public safety. The center had filed papers in court in support of the BATF's position.<br />
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"We should not make it easier for dangerous abusers to get firearms," Vice said. "And we've seen that domestic violence abuse cases are extremely dangerous when guns are involved."<br />
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The Gun Owners Foundation and the National Rifle Association had filed papers in court supporting the state's position.<br />
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Herb Titus, lawyer for the Gun Owners Foundation, said Wednesday his group is disappointed with the appeals court decision.<br />
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"We think it's wrong," Titus said. <b>"We think this is a matter of state right -- that Congress intended that the states have the right to define expungement according to state policy and state purposes, and obviously, the 10th Circuit disagrees."</b><br />
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Mike Blonigen, Casper district attorney and president of the Wyoming Prosecutors Association, said Wednesday that his office has been advising people interested in petitioning for restoration of their gun rights that a decision on the case was pending. The state law requires prosecutors to review restoration petitions.<br />
<div style="color: #990000;"><b><br />
</b></div><div style="color: #990000;"><b>Blonigen said the Wyoming Legislature may choose to change the law to address whether conviction records are truly expunged.</b></div><br />
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"I think it's one of these situations, where if you're going to call it an expungement, it has to have all the characteristics of an expungement, and frankly this law didn't get there," Blonigen said. "You can't say you're going to take it away for these purposes, but not for these three purposes over there."<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-25748329509494158002008-09-18T14:25:00.000-07:002010-11-08T14:28:20.497-08:00Minnesota Supreme Court upholds limits set on sealing criminal recordsThe Minnesota Supreme Court has ruled that district courts do not have the authority to seal criminal records beyond the courts themselves — a decision that may be bad for defendants but good for public-records advocates.<br />
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The case began in 1992, when a defendant identified as S.L.H. pleaded guilty to fifth-degree felony possession of cocaine in Robbinsdale. She was 20. After three years, the charge was dropped to a misdemeanor.<br />
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In 2000, a petition for expungement, or sealing, of her record, was filed, but the district court denied the request.<br />
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She tried again in 2006. S.L.H. argued that she was a single parent of four children and wanted to be better equipped to support her family. She explained she hoped to become a Head Start Teacher or a medical assistant — but neither job would be open to her without expungement of her criminal records.<br />
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Hennepin County District Court agreed. The court found in July 2006 that the benefit of expungement to S.L.H. outweighed the disadvantage to the public from eliminating her record and ordered all judicial records of the offense be sealed.<br />
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But the lower court also said it did not have the authority to order nonjudicial records sealed. That means that records at the state Bureau of Criminal Apprehension still would be open to anyone who wished to see them.<br />
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The Court of Appeals agreed with the district court, and Thursday's Supreme Court decision basically affirms that.<br />
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But the decision seems toleave room for interpretation, said Mark Haase, staff attorney for the Council on Crime and Justice, which filed a brief on behalf of S.L.H.<br />
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It says granting her access to employment is not "essential to the existence, dignity and function of a court" and that granting expungement of records outside the judicial branch is therefore not within its authority.<br />
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But the court seemed to suggest there might be cases that are, citing one in which charges were dismissed.<br />
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"The jury, so to speak, is not completely out on it," Haase said. "We don't want to discourage people from trying to get expungements, because the opinion is not clear. I want people who may have a shot at getting a remedy to pursue that."<br />
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He said it's vitally important for people to have a chance at a clean slate.<br />
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"The vast majority of people who are trying to get expungements are not serious offenders," Haase said. "They're trying to move on with their life; they can't get a job. Do we really want people to carry that with them and (have it) be a hindrance to getting employment and housing for that long?"<br />
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The Supreme Court points out, however, that the Legislature has determined, as outlined in the Minnesota Data Practices Act, that certain law enforcement data are public.<br />
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"The expungement of S.L.H.'s criminal records held outside the judicial branch would effectively override the legislative determination that some of these records be kept open to the public," the court wrote.<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-23265705080270937632008-07-18T13:59:00.000-07:002010-11-08T14:00:39.899-08:00Texas: Hays County courts accidentally put expunged cases online!When Hays County courts put their records online in April, San Marcos lawyers were pleasantly surprised that the county Web site let any Internet user look up court cases and jail information.<br />
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But as some defense lawyers began typing clients' names into the system, they got another surprise, this one much nastier. Their clients' expunged cases, which were supposed to have been erased from the system, popped up on their screens.<br />
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The county's $12.4 million software package from Dallas-based Tyler Technologies had a bug: a stray line of code that could leave the county bombarded with lawsuits from people who had lost a job or a license, or were otherwise hurt by the release of information that was supposed to have been erased.<br />
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"It caused a small uproar," Hays County information technology director Jeff McGill said. "Even though technically it was a minor issue, legally it was a major issue."<br />
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The Hays County information technology staff shut down public access to the site for searching records two days after finding out about the problem, and it remains down today. Tyler Technologies went to work fixing the bug and other problems with the software.<br />
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Anyone trying to search court records has to go to the district clerk's office, but McGill expects the Internet site to be back up later this summer.<br />
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About a dozen counties, including Williamson, Tarrant and Fort Bend, are planning to move their court records to the new Tyler Technologies system.<br />
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In Texas, almost anyone acquitted of a felony or misdemeanor, or whose charges have been dismissed, is eligable for expungement; afterwards, every law enforcement agency, jail, court and state criminal history database must destroy all records related to the case.<br />
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It's as if the whole case never happened.<br />
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Tyler Technologies programmers traced the problem of Hays County's not-so-expunged cases to a quirk in the way the county's old court record system deleted records.<br />
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In the old system, also supplied by Tyler Technologies, when the clerk's office expunged the computer record of a case, the case disappeared from screens and searches. But it lived on in the computerized database for about six months as a remedy for accidental deletions.<br />
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When the court's files were transferred to a new system last year, those expunged cases from the past six months came into the new system whole and turned up in searches, he said. About 25 cases, ranging from hot check charges to child molestation, were affected.<br />
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Tyler Technologies workers fixed the problem by manually removing the cases from the system. The county is now testing the corrected program.<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-10555662773681599702008-06-15T13:53:00.000-07:002010-11-08T14:37:10.273-08:00Romney denied pardons in Massachusetts, even from war veteranA lot of people have probably read this article by now because it was reported by the Associated Press and featured on Yahoo! News, USA Today, CNN, and several other major media outlets.<br />
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<b>How does he expect people to find employment and/or housing?</b><br />
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<blockquote><b>BOSTON (AP) —</b> A decorated Iraq war veteran, convicted as a boy for a pellet gun shooting, seemed like an ideal candidate for a pardon from then - Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney. But Romney, now a U.S. Republican presidential candidate, said no — twice — despite the recommendation of the Commonwealth's Board of Pardons.<br />
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At age 13, Anthony Circosta was convicted of assault for shooting another boy in the arm with a BB gun, a shot that did not break the skin. Circosta worked his way through college, joined the Army National Guard and led a platoon of 20 soldiers in Iraq's deadly Sunni triangle. <br />
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In 2005, as he was serving in Iraq, he sought a pardon to fulfill his dream of becoming a police officer. "I've done everything I can to give back to my state and my community and my country, and my commonwealth to get brushed aside is very frustrating," said Circosta, 29.<br />
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In his presidential bid, Romney often proudly points out that he was the first governor in modern Massachusetts history to deny every request for a pardon or commutation during his four years in office. He says he refused pardons because he did not want to overturn a jury.<br />
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But critics argue that the blanket policy is an abdication of a key power given governors and the president — the ability to recognize how someone convicted of a past crime has turned their life around.<br />
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During the four years Romney was in office, 100 requests for commutations and 172 requests for pardons were filed in the state. All were denied.<br />
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While he refused all requests for pardons as Governor, Romney has said that could change if he is elected president. Asked in last week's debate if he would consider pardoning Vice President Dick Cheney's former chief of staff I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, who was convicted of lying and obstructing the CIA leak investigation, Romney said: "It's worth looking at that. I will study it very closely if I'm lucky enough to be president. And I'd keep that option open."<br />
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During his first year in office, the Board of Pardons recommended 11 pardons and two commutations. After Romney decided against granting any, the number of hearings dropped dramatically. During the next three years, the board recommended just four pardons and a single commutation.<br />
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His Excellency, Governor Romney rejected every one.</blockquote><br />
> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-794439004042021532008-06-10T14:24:00.000-07:002010-11-08T14:25:20.087-08:00Rhode Island House of Representatives OKs bill to destroy criminal recordsDespite objections from the Rhode Island and Providence Plantations Attorney General, the State Police and the Governor, the Rhode Island and Providence Plantations House of Representatives voted 46 to 17 for a bill to quash and destroy the records of criminal cases in which the accused was given a deferred sentence, usually in exchange for sparing the state a trial by pleading no contest or guilty to a crime. <br />
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The bill sailed through the House with no debate yesterday after a heated — but short-circuited debate earlier this week — in which proponents assured their colleagues it was aimed at helping people remove from their records youthful indiscretions that were keeping them from moving ahead in life, school and jobs, and opponents noted the bill goes much further than the state’s existing expungement law in that it is not limited to nonviolent crimes by first-time offenders. <br />
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Beyond that, critics argued that it could be used as a legal club to try to prevent newspapers from publishing facts that the public already knows about crimes — or perhaps should know — if they involve candidates for a job, including public office. Current state law bars people with certain felony convictions from obtaining state licenses to work in nursing, social work and auto repair: this would provide a way around that. <br />
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“So now we are rewriting history and telling the newspaper they can’t refer to something that everybody knows about?” Rep. Laurence Ehrhardt, R-North Kingstown, asked rhetorically. <br />
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Current law already allows the expungement of a single nonviolent offense from the record of a first-time offender five years after he or she has completed a sentence for a misdemeanor, or 10 years after completing a sentence for a felony. <br />
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Despite efforts over the years by the minority community, the criminal defense bar and the gun lobby to shorten the waiting periods, this law remains intact and was used to remove 4,360 misdemeanors and 625 felonies from the public record last year alone, and 28,417 criminal cases from the public record since 2000. <br />
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Yesterday’s bill was sparked by a November decision by the Rhode Island Supreme Court on the treatment of cases in which the admitted criminal had been given a deferred prison sentence, as was the case in a number of high-profile cases involving accused stalkers, embezzlers, an admitted accomplice to a gunpoint robbery in Waterplace Park who traded testimony for a reduced sentence, one of the admitted co-conspirators in the Lincoln bribery scandal and at least one child molester. <br />
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The court's decision centered on two admitted criminals foiled by a judge in their efforts to get their records expunged. One had pleaded no contest to second-degree robbery; the other to a drug-possession charge. Both received deferred sentences. They both appealed to the high court after a judge ruled them ineligible for expungement: the first because he had committed a violent crime, and the second because she got into further trouble. <br />
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"Because they never were actually sentenced," their lawyer argued that "they had not been convicted of any offense and therefore all records involving their arrest and plea should be erased." But the Supreme Court disagreed. Since "a plea of nolo contendere is an implied confession of guilt," the court said "it follows that such a plea constitutes a conviction for purposes of weighing who is and is not eligible for expungement, even when it has been followed by a deferred sentence."<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-32634642071541652992008-06-10T14:19:00.000-07:002010-11-08T14:19:46.060-08:00Online access to expungement servicesThe expungement service offered by Records Removal Services comes at an incredible price! Once you have identified whether you are eligible for our expungement services, just click the link "<a href="http://www.recordsremoval.com/sign_up.html">enroll now</a>."<br />
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To know more about our expungement assistance & services visit <a href="http://www.recordsremoval.com/">http://www.recordsremoval.com</a>.<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-6019000829926843062008-03-09T14:14:00.000-07:002010-11-08T14:15:58.886-08:00Restoring voting rights in Kentucky made easierBy John Cheves<br />
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<b>FRANKFORT --</b> Felons who complete their sentences can get their voting rights restored more easily under changes to the pardon process announced Tuesday by Governor Steve Beshear.<br />
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Beshear said he will drop requirements for an essay and three character references, both imposed by previous Gov. Ernie Fletcher. He also will revoke a $2 fee.<br />
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Under the "barriers" placed by Fletcher, the number of felons whose voting rights were restored shrank from more than 600 a year to about 250 a year.<br />
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"This disenfranchisement makes no sense," Beshear said.<br />
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"It dilutes the energy of democracy, which functions only if all classes and categories of people have a voice, not just the privileged, powerful people," he said. Kentucky is one of the few states to deny felons voting rights after they complete their sentences.<br />
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About 129,000 Kentuckians can't vote because of a felony conviction, Beshear said. He said corrections officials will help interested felons with pardon applications before their release from prison or jail, and his office will process more than 1,500 applications left behind by Fletcher, plus 176 new applications filed since Jan. 1.<br />
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Jefferson Commonwealth's Attorney David Stengel, who joined Beshear at the Capitol for the announcement, said that Fletcher's pardon process was unfair.<br />
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Beshear said he favors House Bill 70, a proposed constitutional amendment that would automatically restore the right to vote to most felons. But he stopped short of saying he would throw the weight of the governor's office behind it. HB 70 has waited on the House floor for weeks while House leaders debate casino gambling and the budget.<br />
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"I'm urging over and over that it be called," said its sponsor, Rep. Jesse Crenshaw, D-Lexington.<br />
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Kentuckians for the Commonwealth, a non-profit group has been pushing HB 70 since January 2008.<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-581496161185018908.post-48962268851455181252008-02-05T14:10:00.000-08:002010-11-08T14:12:48.510-08:00New Texas Non-Disclosure LimitationThe Texas Legislature recently enacted another eligibility requirement for non-disclosures. <br />
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After September 1, 2007, a person petitioning for non-disclosure cannot have been convicted or put on deferred adjudication for another offense while on deferred for the offense they wish to seal. <br />
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For example, you successfully complete deferred adjudication for theft. However, while on the theft deferred, you picked up a deferred adjudication for assault. You will now not be able to petition to seal the theft deferred. <br />
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If you are on deferred adjudication probation and pick up another offense, it is now more important than ever to fight the new charge.<br />
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> Posted by Records Removal Services. The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.Unknownnoreply@blogger.com0