Tampa Record Sealing & Expungement Attorney
A criminal record follows you in ways the court never announces at sentencing. Job applications, apartment rentals, professional licensing boards, and background checks run by banks or lenders can all surface an arrest or conviction that you assumed was behind you. Florida law provides two distinct legal remedies for this: sealing and expungement. Neither is automatic. Both require a petition, strict eligibility requirements, and in most cases a hearing. Omar Abdelghany of OA Law Firm handles Tampa record sealing and expungement matters for people throughout the Tampa Bay area who are ready to put a past arrest or charge where it belongs.
What Sealing and Expungement Actually Do to Your Record
These are not the same thing, and the difference matters.
When a record is sealed, it still exists. Florida criminal justice agencies can access it under certain circumstances, and some licensing boards and employers in regulated industries retain the legal right to see it. But for most background checks run by private employers and landlords, a sealed record will not appear. You can lawfully deny the arrest or charge in most situations.
Expungement goes further. The physical and digital records are destroyed or returned to you. A sealed record can later be expunged in certain situations if enough time passes and eligibility requirements are still met. An expunged record gives you a cleaner slate, though certain government agencies and licensing authorities still have the ability to reference it under Florida law.
One limit applies to both: Florida allows only one sealing or expungement per person, with narrow exceptions. This means the decision about which record to target, and when to move, carries real weight. Moving forward without understanding your eligibility can waste the single opportunity you are entitled to.
Who Qualifies Under Florida Statutes
Florida’s eligibility rules are specific. Getting this wrong at the outset means a denied petition and a burned application with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.
For expungement, the underlying charge must have been dismissed, nolle prossed, or otherwise dropped by the prosecution. The case cannot have resulted in a conviction, an adjudication of guilt, or even a withhold of adjudication. If you completed a pretrial diversion program and the charge was dismissed, you may qualify, but program eligibility varies by charge type and county.
For sealing, a withhold of adjudication is acceptable. That means if you entered a plea, the judge withheld a formal finding of guilt, and you completed probation or other conditions, you may be eligible to seal. You must have no prior sealing or expungement, no prior convictions for certain disqualifying offenses, and you must not have been adjudicated guilty of the charge at issue or any other charge.
Certain charges are disqualifying by statute regardless of outcome. These include sexual offenses, most violent felonies, domestic violence offenses, and a specific list of crimes under Chapter 775 of the Florida Statutes. Even if your case was dismissed, a disqualifying charge in your history can block eligibility. This is one reason why a thorough review of your complete record matters before you file anything.
Hillsborough County courts, where most Tampa cases are heard, process petitions through the Clerk of Courts after FDLE issues a Certificate of Eligibility. That certificate requires fingerprinting and a formal application. Omar reviews records before initiating this process to make sure the filing will not be rejected on eligibility grounds.
Consequences That a Record Creates Before It Is Cleared
Florida does not restrict what private employers can ask about arrests. An arrest that never led to a conviction can still appear on a standard background check and cost you a job offer. Landlords in competitive rental markets can use the same information to decline your application with no explanation required.
Professional licensing in fields like nursing, real estate, law, and education often involves character and fitness reviews. A disclosed arrest, even without a conviction, can trigger additional scrutiny or an outright denial. Sealing or expunging the record before applying gives you a defensible legal position.
For people who are not U.S. citizens, an arrest on record can create complications in immigration proceedings, naturalization applications, or visa renewals. Immigration consequences of a criminal record are a distinct and complicated area, but clearing a record where Florida law permits can remove at least one layer of exposure.
Tampa’s job market and economy are built heavily around healthcare, finance, hospitality, and technology. All of these industries conduct thorough background checks. A sealed or expunged record is not a guarantee of any outcome, but it substantially changes what appears in a standard search.
Questions People Actually Have About This Process
If my case was dismissed, does my record clear automatically?
No. A dismissal ends the criminal case but does not remove the arrest record. The arrest and case history remain in Florida’s criminal justice database until you affirmatively petition to have them sealed or expunged. Nothing happens automatically.
Can I seal or expunge a DUI in Florida?
DUI convictions are not eligible for sealing or expungement in Florida. If a DUI charge was completely dismissed or you completed a diversion program and the charge was dropped, expungement may be possible, but the eligibility rules still apply. A conviction or adjudication of guilt for DUI permanently disqualifies that charge.
How long does the process take in Hillsborough County?
The process typically takes several months from start to finish. The FDLE certificate application alone can take two to three months. After receiving the certificate, the petition is filed with the court, and a hearing may be scheduled. The full timeline varies depending on court scheduling and whether the state attorney’s office objects to the petition.
What happens if someone already found my arrest record before I sealed it?
Sealing or expunging a record affects what appears in future background checks. It does not retroactively remove information already gathered by a private data broker or website. Some third-party background check companies and mugshot websites update their records after a legal order is issued, but this requires follow-up and is not always guaranteed. Omar can advise on realistic expectations for your specific situation.
Can my employer still find out after the record is sealed?
For most private employers, a sealed record will not appear in a standard background check. However, certain employers are permitted by Florida law to inquire about sealed records. These include law enforcement agencies, schools, the Florida Bar, and other licensing entities specifically enumerated in the statute. Knowing where you are applying matters when evaluating whether sealing achieves your goal.
I had more than one arrest. Can I clear all of them?
Florida permits only one sealing or expungement per lifetime with limited exceptions. If you have multiple arrests or charges in your history, the strategy of which record to target, and whether any prior entries disqualify you entirely, requires a careful legal review. Omar evaluates full record histories before advising on how to proceed.
Does expungement work the same way in federal court?
No. Federal law does not have a general expungement statute equivalent to Florida’s process. Federal records are handled differently, and options are far more limited. Omar is licensed in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida and the Northern District of Florida and can address what options, if any, exist in a federal matter.
Starting the Process Toward a Cleared Record in Tampa
If you are ready to find out whether your arrest or charge qualifies for relief, the first step is a complete review of your record history. OA Law Firm handles Tampa expungement and record sealing cases from that initial eligibility review through the filing of the petition and any hearing that follows. Omar personally handles every matter in the office, which means you deal directly with your attorney at every stage. He will assess your record, explain what is realistically achievable, and move forward without wasting your time on a petition that should not be filed. Contact OA Law Firm to schedule a consultation about clearing your record.
