Prior convictions definition

Prior convictions means felonies and misdemeanors, prior convictions
Prior convictions means felonies and misdemeanors, prior convictions not classified at the time of conviction, federal or out-of-state convictions, circuit, magistrate, and municipal court convictions, and juvenile adjudications if the offense is a felony if committed by an adult. Prior convictions set aside or prior convictions of which the defendant was pardoned for reasons unrelated to innocence or legal error are to be counted in calculation of the prior record score. Expunged convictions are never counted.

Examples of Prior convictions in a sentence

  • Background: Prior convictions may represent convictions in the federal system, fifty state systems, the District of Columbia, territories, and foreign, tribal, and military courts.

  • Prior convictions / cautions do not necessarily permanently disbar an applicant.

  • Prior conviction(s) utilized to enhance punishment shall be included in either the indictment or a formal notice filed at least thirty (30) days before trial or the entry of a guilty plea, absent written waiver of the thirty (30) day requirement by the defendant.

  • Prior convictions as disqualificationsIn evaluating a license application, the superintendent shall consider the criminal record of any individual applicant, of any partner, if the applicant is a partnership, of any officer or director, if the applicant is a corporation, or of any employee of the foregoing, in accordance with Title 5, chapter 341.

  • Prior convictions, if any, of an owner, or of anyone in control of the object under any State or federal law relating to any controlled substance.

  • Prior convictions under the Youth Rehabilitation Act are counted like any other conviction without regard to whether the conviction has been set aside.

  • Prior convictions need not be alleged in the specification to permit increased punish- ment.

  • Predisposition is measured “at the time the government first proposed the crime, but the nature and degree of the government’s inducement and the defendant’s responses to it are relevant to the determination of predisposition.” Id. Prior convictions for similar offenses are “relevant but not conclusive evidence of predisposition; a defendant with a criminal record can be entrapped.” Id. Carwell’s predisposition is aptly demonstrated by his overwhelming enthusiasm for the venture.

  • Prior convictions should be recorded in descending order by the date of conviction, starting with the most recent conviction.

  • Prior convictions must not be too old; they must receive criminal history points under§4A1.1(a), (b), and (c) to qualify as predicates for the career offender enhancement.

Related to Prior convictions

  • Conviction means a finding of guilt (including a plea of nolo contendere) or imposition of sentence, or both, by any judicial body charged with the responsibility to determine violations of the Federal or State criminal drug statutes.

  • Sexual offense means any of the following offenses:

  • Felony means a violation of a penal law of this state for which the offender may be punished by imprisonment for more than 1 year or an offense expressly designated by law to be a felony.

  • Violent juvenile felony means any of the delinquent acts enumerated in subsection B or C of

  • Deportation or forcible transfer of population means forced displacement of the persons concerned by expulsion or other coercive acts from the area in which they are lawfully present, without grounds permitted under international law;

  • Victim or target of Nazi persecution means any individual persecuted or targeted for persecution by

  • Convicted means that there has been a determination of guilt as a result of a trial or the entry of a plea of guilty or nolo contendere, regardless of whether adjudication is withheld. Conviction of a similar offense includes, but is not limited to, a conviction by a federal or military tribunal, including courts-martial conducted by the Armed Forces of the United States, and includes a conviction or entry of a plea of guilty or nolo contendere resulting in a sanction in any state of the United States or other jurisdiction. A sanction includes, but is not limited to, a fine, probation, community control, parole, conditional release, control release, or incarceration in a state prison, federal prison, private correctional facility, or local detention facility.

  • Family or household members means spouses, domestic partners, former spouses, former domestic partners, persons who have a child in common regardless of whether they have been married or have lived together at any time, adult persons related by blood or marriage, adult persons who are presently residing together or who have resided together in the past, persons sixteen years of age or older who are presently residing together or who have resided together in the past and who have or have had a dating relationship, persons sixteen years of age or older with whom a person sixteen years of age or older has or has had a dating relationship, and persons who have a biological or legal parent-child relationship, including stepparents and stepchildren and grandparents and grandchildren.

  • Family violence means conduct as defined by S.7 of the Family Violence Act 2004.