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It was merely a verbal warning, I did not receive a ticket or record of it whatsoever. However, the officer did run my name/DL number through the system. Of course, I have never had anything on my record so it came back clear. He continued asking me all manner of unrelated questions which I answered truthfully. I am just wondering if it will ever show up on my record that they ran my information? He said that it was a "Class E Misdemeanor," will this show up on my record at all?

2006-07-11 14:20:33 · 6 answers · asked by Contrary D 1 in Politics & Government Law Enforcement & Police

6 answers

Some police record systems record that such and such an officer ran such and such a name at such and such a time.
The purpose of this is more to prevent officers from abusing their right to use the database by using it to check up on people for personal not professional reasons than to "red flag" someone. Although when running a license plate and the dispatcher or the computer says the plates have been run 30 + times in the past week it's usually a tip off that that the drivers involved in some shady business or their a really bad driver and about to lose their license. As for the loitering, you were not charged or convicted of anything, you were not given a ticket (which if you pay is a voluntary guilty plea) or a promise to appear for a court trial. You were given a verbal and just that, the officer likely has written down your name and that he gave you a verbal warning in their note book to cover his or her own accountability but that's as far as it goes. You were let off easy, since you were not charged or convicted of any offense you have no record of committing a "class E misdemeanor". I hope you can consider the event a learning experience and can take something away from it and won't be caught loitering in parking lots again.

2006-07-11 15:24:29 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

In this day and age the fact that an inquiry about you was made at a particular time and place may be recorded in some database, but you do not have a "record" until you are convicted of something.

2006-07-11 14:26:19 · answer #2 · answered by Steve Wood 3 · 0 0

Mr eco-friendly Eyez, each and every offense on your list remains on your list. It under no circumstances is going away; in spite of the indisputable fact that, your significant issue is the DISPOSITION (the way it became ruled/settled in court). it truly is what society's concerns are. a million. the price/offense, 2. how before it became, and maximum seriously, 3. the way it became ruled (DISPOSITION). also, in case you get an primary history examine and look at no stunning warrants, then your list will be sparkling. (assuming that you fullfilled ALL responsibilities w/ this value for sure). yet, if an entire criminal history examine is done on you, then each and every offense (which incorporates tickets, misdemeanors, juvenile offenses i.e. truancy's/disorderly conducts and so on.) will be seen-it doesn't bypass away. signal, regulation Enforcement Officer

2016-12-01 02:34:33 · answer #3 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

You have to be convicted to have a Class E Misdemeanor. A warning is not a conviction.

2006-07-11 14:23:19 · answer #4 · answered by Bill 6 · 0 0

No record should be lodged. I'm curious, what state do you live in? We don't have class E misdemeanors here in Texas.

2006-07-11 17:10:56 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

no cause you were never convicted.veral warning is just that warning.

2006-07-11 14:24:17 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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