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I want to go to med school and med schools don't accept students with any convictions. Dot he two mean the same, I was convicted of something although one is less severe than the other. I am not guilty but it is up to the judge so I don't know what he'll decide.

2007-05-01 10:46:15 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

Municipal ordinance

2007-05-01 11:02:12 · update #1

How it works is that it is my word against theirs. And the judge decides who to believe. I have proof that I didn't steal, but now they are saying I was trying to. My lawyer got a subpoena for the video in the Suncoast store. Turns out they have no cameras so that doesn't help me or them. Again it is a matter of who the judge will believe, them or me, and I have no prior records ever.

2007-05-01 11:29:07 · update #2

2 answers

Having a conviction for a driving ticket or something of that nature is not the same as a felony conviction or a conviction involving fraud or dishonesty. Nearly everyone in the world has the former. I think you should take a more detailed look at the admission requirements - you may be confusing a request for felony convictions as a blanket request for your criminal background. I know that the healthcare field fairly prohibits those with felony convictions from obtaining licenses to practice (nursing, physicians, etc.) I am not sure that a misdemeanor conviction (pleading guilty to a traffic charge) is the same thing in this case. Good luck -

2007-05-01 11:16:39 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you are not guilty, why would you plead guilty? Doesn't make any sense to me.

2007-05-01 10:49:15 · answer #2 · answered by msi_cord 7 · 0 0

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