Texas Order of
Non-Disclosure
If you have been successful on deferred adjudication
probation, you may be able to control access to your record
through an Order for Non-Disclosure. To qualify to have your
case sealed under an order of non-disclosure, you must have
been given deferred adjudication (community service) and
successfully completed that probation period.
Once you have completed deferred adjudication community
supervision under CCP art. 42.12 and the statutory waiting
period for your offense has passed you may be eligible to
have your records sealed by petitioning the court for
non-disclosure of your criminal records pursuant (Government
Codes 411.081(d)-(h)).
Once sealed, you may then legally and truthfully deny your
criminal conviction. This order prohibits the government from
disclosing your criminal conviction to the public and
prevents
a private entity that compiles and disseminates for
compensation criminal record information from compiling or
disseminating information that is covered by the order of
non-disclosure. The state will be allowed to disclose
information about the case to other criminal justice
agencies for criminal justice or regulatory licensing
purposes or any agency or entity listed in Section
411.081(i).
However, sealing a record is not the same as expunging a
record. Sealing prevents the release of your record to the
public; however, the record will stay available to the law
enforcement community and to certain state agencies such as
most state licensing agencies. In any subsequent criminal
proceeding, the information can still be used against you.
What is an Order of Non-Disclosure?
An Order of Non-Disclosure is an order from the court
effectively sealing your record from the public. It allows an
individual to deny arrest or prosecution for which public
information exists unless they are being prosecuted for a
subsequent offense.
Benefits of a Texas an Order of Non-Disclosure:
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Tell employers that you have not been convicted of a crime
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Become eligible for student loans
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Become eligible for housing assistance
-
Become eligible for more types of professional licenses
and certificates
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Tell friends and family that you have not been
convicted of
a crime
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No more fear or embarrassment when someone does a
background check
Who is eligible?
You may qualify for an Order of Non-Disclosure if you
satisfy the following requirements:
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You entered a plea of guilty or no contest; AND
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The judge deferred further proceedings against you and
placed you on community supervision (probation) without a
finding of guilt; AND
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You have been successfully discharged from community
supervision; AND
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The case against you has been dismissed; AND
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You meet waiting period after completing your sentence:
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No waiting period for most misdemeanors
-
5-year waiting period for misdemeanors under Chapters 20
(kidnapping, unlawful restraint), 21(sexual offenses), 22 (assaultive
offenses), 25 (offenses against the family), 42 (disorderly
related offenses), and 46 (weapons offenses) of the Penal
Code
-
5-year waiting period for all felonies.
Who is not eligible?
The following offenses are not eligible:
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Aggravated Kidnapping
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Sex Offender
-
Murder
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Capital Murder
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Injury to children, elderly, or disabled individuals
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Child abandonment or endangerment
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Stalking
-
Family violence
What is the process?
Contact The Gilbert G. Garcia Law Firm today!
Once you hire us, we can file a Petition for Non-Disclosure
with the court and a request a hearing to be held to
determine if an Order of Non-Disclosure can be granted in
your case. We will prepare all of the documents for you and
deliver them ready to be signed, notarized and filed with the
courts. We will attend the hearing and guide you thru the
process. What happens if the court grants it? Many Texas agencies are forbidden from disclosing the
information to the public. The records are eventually sealed
by DPS.
After an Order of Non-Disclosure is granted, entities such
as PublicData.com or other background check sites can be
fined for releasing the information.
Please be aware that a criminal justice agency can still
disclose criminal history record information that is the
subject of an Order of Non-Disclosure to the non-criminal
justice agencies or entities Section 411.081(i) of the
government code.
A criminal justice agency may still disclose criminal
history record information that is the subject of an order
of nondisclosure to the following noncriminal justice
agencies or entities only: State Board for Education Certification
School district, charter school, private school, commercial
transportation company, or education shared service
arrangement Texas State Board of Medical Examiners Texas School of the Blind and
visually Impaired
Board of Law Examiners State Bar of Texas District Court regarding a petition for name change
Texas School for the Deaf Department of Family and
Protective Services
Texas Youth Commission Department of Assistive and
Rehabilitative Services
Department of State Health Services Texas Private Security Board
Municipal of volunteer Fire Department Board of Nurse Examiners
Safe house providing shelter to children Public or Nonprofit Hospital
Texas Juvenile Probation Commission Securities Commissioner, banking commissioner,
savings and
loan commissioner, or the credit union commissioner Texas State Board of Public Accountancy
Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation Health and Human
Services Commission; and
Department of Aging and Disability Services
The court's order will be sent to the Department of Public
Safety. The Department of Public Safety will then send the
order to all law enforcement agencies, jails or other
detention facilities, magistrates, courts, prosecuting
attorneys, correctional facilities, central state
depositories of criminal records, and other officials or
agencies or other entities of this state or of any political
subdivision of this state, and to all central federal
depositories of criminal records that there is reason to
belie have criminal history record information that is the
subject of the order. Those entities are obliged not to
disclose the deferred adjudication record information to
anyone other than:
Other criminal justice agencies For criminal justice or regulatory licensing purposes An agency or entity listed in Section 411.081(i) The person who is the subject of the order
Benefits of Choosing The Gilbert G. Garcia Law Firm
-
You will be represented by a lawyer with over 30 years of
experience
-
Personalized payments plans available and all major credit
cards accepted
-
If you lose your job while your case is pending, you owe
nothing more!*
-
Fastest possible results
-
We sere ALL of Texas
-
Filing fees are included in our fee structure
-
One call starts the process — 936-756-3333
-
We will write letters to potential employers explaining
your case – At no additional charge!
For a little Peace of Mind during this Recession:
If, while your case is pending, you suffer:
involuntary
unemployment, severe physical disability, self-employed
personal bankruptcy and/or catastrophic casualty loss (loss
of your home, business, etc.), then we will forgive further
obligation and represent you PRO BONO-at no additional
charge.
Should you experience any of the above after signing
a contract with our firm, if you have made at least two
timely payments, (the initial payment and one additional
payment) and are current on your payment plan as detailed in
your contract, we will forgive the remainder of your contract
and represent you as if you had paid in full.
However, you may still incur fines, fees and court costs from
the state.
WE ARE IN THIS TOGETHER - THE GILBERT G. GARCIA LAW FIRM
WILL WORK WITH YOU DURING THESE HARD TIMES. |