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Eighth Judicial Circuit Jerry W. Peace, Solicitor |
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Expungement Printable Forms
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Expungement
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EXPUNGEMENT
INFORMATION What is Expungement? An "Expungement" is the destruction or obliteration of criminal records relating to an arrest or a conviction. South Carolina law allows for the destruction of arrest and/or conviction information under the following limited circumstances:
Dismissal or Non-Conviction of Offense Pursuant to South Carolina Code of Laws § 17-1-40, the arrest and booking record, files, mug shots, and fingerprints of any person, who after being charged with a criminal offense and such charge is discharged or proceedings against such person dismissed or is found to be innocent of such charge, shall be destroyed and no evidence of such record pertaining to such charge shall be retained by any municipal, county or State law enforcement agency
First Offense Convictions in Magistrate's or Municipal Court Under South Carolina Code of Laws § 22-5-910, a defendant may apply three years after the date of the conviction for an order expunging the records of the arrest and conviction of a first offense conviction in a magistrate's court or a municipal court. However, this section does not apply to any of the following offenses:
Fraudulent Checks -(first offense) After a first
offense conviction of fraudulent intent in drawing check, draft or
other written order, the defendant may, after one year from the date
of the conviction, apply, or cause someone acting on his behalf to
apply, to the court for an order expunging the records of the arrest
and conviction. This provision does not apply to any crime
classified as a felony (that is, any check valued in excess of Five
Thousand Dollars). If the defendant has had no other conviction
during the one-year period following the conviction under this
section, the court shall issue an order expunging the records. No
person has any rights under this section more than one time.
Simple Possession of Marijuana -(first offense) Pursuant to South Carolina Code of Laws § 44-53-450(b), any person, not over the age of twenty-five, who has been sentenced to a "Conditional Discharge" for their first offense of simple possession of marijuana, may, upon completion of the sentencing requirements, apply to the court for an order to expunge from all official records all information relating to his arrest, indictment, trial, finding of guilty, and dismissal and discharge pursuant to this section. No person as to whom such order has been entered shall be held thereafter under any provision of any law to be guilty of perjury or otherwise giving a false statement by reason of his failures to recite or acknowledge such arrest, or indictment or information, or trial in response to any inquiry made of him for any purpose.
Successful Completion of PTI Pre-trial Intervention is a diversion program for first-time non-violent criminal offenders. Participants are required to perform, among other things, community restitution and make monetary restitution to their victims. South Carolina Code of Laws § 17-22-150 allows offenders, who successfully complete the pretrial intervention program to apply to the court for an order to destroy all official records relating to his arrest. The effect of the order is to restore the person, in the contemplation of the law, to the status he occupied before the arrest. No person, as to whom the order has been entered, may be held thereafter under any provision of any law to be guilty of perjury or otherwise giving a false statement by reason of his failure to recite or acknowledge the arrest in response to any inquiry made of him for any purpose.
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