<p>Please help. I have a kid with a class B misdemeanor charge (caught when he shoplifted a pair of shoe worths of $56) when he was 19 years old. With such a bad record, can he ever be admitted to any law school?</p>
<p>I would guess that the answer is "yes." My sense is that if the conviction is for a felony or a crime involving dishonesty, then the applicant has a big problem. On the other hand, I believe that your typical "young and foolish" crime can be overcome if the applicant discloses it fully and candidly to the character committee. In a recent thread, I cited a New Jersey case which should give you some insight into how these things work.</p>
<p>Regardless, your child should look into having his or her record expunged, which is available in many states a few years after the misdemeanor conviction.</p>
<p>Even if a criminal conviction is expunged, however, it will have to be revealed on one's application for admission to the bar in New York, Connecticut and, I'm guessing, most other states.</p>
<p>The following is the prompt from the New York bar application:</p>
<p>"Have you ever, either as an adult or a juvenile, been cited, arrested, taken into custody, charged with, indicted, convicted or tried for, or pleaded guilty to, the commission of any felony or misdemeanor or the violation of any law, except minor parking violations, or been the subject of any juvenile delinquency or youthful offender proceeding? YES___ NO___. If you answer yes, state the charge or charges, the disposition thereof and the underlying facts. Although a conviction may have been expunged from the records by an order of a court, it nevertheless should be disclosed in the answer to this question. Please note that you should have available and be prepared to submit or exhibit copies of police and court records regarding any matter you disclose in reply to this question."</p>
<p>A misdemeanor conviction before going to law school generally does not preclude you from going to law school or taking the bar and becoming a lawyer (although law schools might consider it as a factor in admissions). However, in applications to law schools and to a state bar to be admitted as a lawyer, you will be asked about any prior convictions and a failure to reveal it on such applications will be considered an offense that would preclude you from being admitted to the bar and, if the decption is learned after you are admitted, you can have your license revoked. In other words, the misdemeanor will not, in and of itself, keep you from becoming a lawyer, but concealing the fact that you have such a conviction will.</p>
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Even if a criminal conviction is expunged, however, it will have to be revealed on one's application for admission to the bar in New York, Connecticut and, I'm guessing, most other states
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</p>
<p>I agree, but I think that as a general matter, it's better to have one's record expunged if possible. If I had a misdemeanor conviction, I would prefer to be able to put on my bar application that my record had been expunged.</p>
<p>You should check with each state before disclosing it on an application. California, to my knowledge, does not require you to disclose it.</p>
<p>"Any arrest, conviction or other proceeding the record of which has been ordered or is required to be sealed, obliterated,
dismissed, or destroyed pursuant to Sections 851. 7, 1203. 4a<em>, 1203. 45</em>, 1000 to 1000. 11, 1001 to 1001. 11, or 1001. 20 to
1001.35 of the Penal Code of the State of California, or Section 781 of the Welfare and Institutions Code of the State of
California, or Section 11361.5 of the Health and Safety Code of the State of California, or pursuant to a similar statute of another
jurisdiction w hich pr ovides in substance and effect that upon entr y of an order, such arr est, conviction, or other proceeding shall
be deemed not to have occurred or that the person to whom the proceeding r elates, in answering any related question, may state
it did not occur."</p>
<p>We feel much better now. I was worried that his mistake could ruin his whole life. Thanks again.</p>
<p>It doesn't look good, but it won't preclude you from becoming an attorney. As a matter of a fact, contray to popular belief with the expection of like 6 states, a felony doesn't even "automatically" disqualify you. </p>
<p>After I read page 10 of 60 of the attached document, I thought, as my kid is now 25 years old and has volunteered more than five hundred hours of community services since his conviction. his present character and fitness qualifies him for admission. I could be wrong as I don't know legal terms well. Please explain why you said it doesn't look good.
Thanks for the help.</p>
<p>Well primarily because it's a crime of moral turpitude.</p>
<p>A single youthful misdemeanor charge ten years before admission to the bar is unlikely to prevent admission to the bar, unless its disclosure is required, and the applicant fails to disclose it.</p>
<p>There may be a fitness hearing; they may ask whether whether he revealed the conviction to his employers. </p>
<p>I once testified in a fitness hearing for an applicant to the bar with two shoplifting convictions on his record (the second of which was a felony, as he was out on bail for the first one when arrested for the second). They asked me whether he had concealed the conviction from our common employer. (I told him that I don't believe we had asked about criminal convictions in the interview process, but that he had volunteered to me that he wanted to clear up some personal problems before applying for admission to the bar.) He was admitted, by a 2-1 vote.</p>
<p>There are several states where a felony conviction means you can't be admitted to the bar, absent a pardon from the governor.</p>
<p>are there any states, where a pardon is insuffecient for admission to the bar?</p>
<p>Not that I have heard of.</p>
<p>How can a law school find out if your conviction is expunged???</p>
<p>I’m thinking politics would be the way to go.</p>
<p>When they do the thorough background check for character and fitness. It is best to disclose even if expunge than to not disclose and have it come up in the search. Nondisclosure even if it is expunged is a worse offense.</p>