Clearwater Record Sealing & Expungement Attorney
A criminal record follows you in ways the justice system rarely explains at the time of your arrest or plea. Rental applications, background checks for employment, professional licensing boards, even college admissions offices pull these records. For many people in Clearwater and Pinellas County, Clearwater record sealing and expungement is the single most consequential legal step they can take after a case concludes. Omar Abdelghany of OA Law Firm handles these petitions for clients throughout the Tampa Bay area, including those in Clearwater who want to move forward without a record defining them.
Sealing vs. Expungement: The Distinction That Determines Your Options
These two remedies are often mentioned together, but they work differently and they do not apply to the same situations. Getting this right at the start matters, because filing under the wrong track wastes time and money.
Expungement physically destroys the record. Once granted, the court and arresting agency are required to expunge the record from their files. Florida law allows this when charges were dismissed, nolle prossed, or a withhold of adjudication was entered under specific circumstances. After expungement, you can lawfully deny the arrest ever occurred in most contexts.
Record sealing does not destroy the record. It removes it from public view, meaning background check services, landlords, and most employers can no longer access it. However, certain government agencies, law enforcement, the courts, and entities involved in licensing still have access. After sealing, you are also generally permitted to legally deny the arrest, with limited exceptions.
Florida also has a strict one-time rule that applies to both remedies. You are entitled to have one prior criminal record sealed or expunged in your lifetime. That single-use rule is one reason the decision deserves careful attention before you file.
What Florida Law Actually Requires Before You Can Qualify
Not every case is eligible, and the eligibility criteria are precise. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement reviews every petition before it reaches a judge, and rejections at that stage are common when the petition is incomplete or the underlying offense falls outside what the statute permits.
For expungement in Florida, charges generally must have been dismissed, dropped by the prosecutor, or resolved with a withhold of adjudication. If you were convicted, meaning adjudication was actually entered by the court, expungement is not available regardless of how much time has passed.
For sealing, adjudication must have been withheld and you must have successfully completed any sentence, probation, or supervision imposed. Certain offenses are permanently excluded from sealing under Florida Statutes Section 943.0585 and 943.059. These include sexual offenses, domestic violence offenses in many circumstances, child abuse, robbery, arson, and a number of other enumerated crimes. The list is detailed and sometimes surprising. An offense that sounds minor may be on the exclusion list, while a more serious-sounding charge may be eligible.
There are also waiting periods. For sealing, you generally must wait until your sentence and any probationary period are complete. Omar reviews the specifics of each case individually before advising on timing and eligibility, because assumptions about eligibility often turn out to be wrong when the statute is read carefully.
The Practical Value of Getting a Clearwater Expungement Done Correctly
Pinellas County is home to healthcare employers, government contractors, hospitality businesses, and financial institutions, all of which conduct detailed background checks as a standard condition of employment. Clearwater itself sits in a market where real estate rentals are competitive and landlords routinely screen applicants. A sealed or expunged record removes the barrier in most of those contexts.
Florida does not automate this process. It does not happen when your probation ends or when enough years pass. You must petition for it, complete the FDLE application process, and obtain a court order. Until that order is granted and served on every relevant agency, the record remains accessible. This is a step that has to be taken intentionally, and errors in the paperwork can result in denial or significant delays.
Once the process is complete, the relief is real. In most situations you can answer “no” on job applications that ask whether you have been arrested or convicted of a crime. Certain applications still require disclosure, including those for law enforcement positions, teaching certifications, working with children or the elderly, and a handful of professional licenses regulated under Florida law. Omar explains these distinctions to every client at the outset so there are no surprises after the petition is granted.
Questions People in Clearwater Are Actually Asking About This Process
How long does the expungement process take in Florida?
It varies, but the process from submitting the FDLE application to receiving a court order typically takes several months. FDLE must issue a Certificate of Eligibility before the court petition can be filed, and that review alone can take six to eight weeks depending on volume. Once the petition is filed in Pinellas County court, additional time passes before a hearing or order. Planning ahead matters, especially if you have a specific employment or licensing deadline in mind.
Can I seal or expunge a record if I received a withhold of adjudication on a felony?
It depends on the specific felony. Some felonies with a withhold of adjudication are eligible for sealing, while others are permanently excluded by statute. The type of charge matters more than the felony designation itself. This is exactly the kind of question that requires reviewing the specific statute rather than relying on general assumptions.
What happens to my record if the petition is denied?
The record remains as it is. A denial does not worsen your situation, but it does consume your one-time eligibility in certain circumstances, depending on why the petition was denied. That is one reason it is worth confirming eligibility thoroughly before filing rather than testing the process to see what happens.
Do arrests that did not lead to charges qualify?
An arrest that did not result in charges being filed can be expunged in Florida. If no information or indictment was filed and you were not placed on pretrial diversion for the offense, the arrest record may be eligible. These situations are often overlooked because people assume that if they were not charged, there is nothing on their record. Arrest records are public and remain searchable until they are expunged.
Will my expunged record show up on FBI background checks?
State expungement addresses state records. If the arrest generated a federal record, such as an FBI fingerprint file, the state order does not automatically reach those records. In most cases, Florida expungement also triggers a process to address the FDLE database, and Omar walks clients through what the order actually covers and what steps are needed to make the relief comprehensive.
Can an employer ask about an expunged record after it is sealed or expunged?
Florida law restricts certain employers from asking. Generally, after expungement, you may legally deny the existence of the arrest in most employment contexts. However, certain licensed professions and government employers are permitted under Florida law to inquire, and for those applications honest disclosure may still be required. Omar advises clients specifically on which contexts require continued disclosure based on the nature of the expunged offense.
What if I have multiple arrests on my record?
The one-time rule means you can only seal or expunge one prior criminal record in your lifetime. If you have multiple arrests, a careful analysis of which record causes the most harm and which is eligible for the remedy is essential before filing. There is no undoing the use of your one opportunity once it is spent.
OA Law Firm Handles Clearwater Expungement Petitions from Start to Finish
Omar Abdelghany personally handles every matter at OA Law Firm. You will work directly with your attorney through the FDLE application, the petition, and the hearing process, not an assistant or a paralegal who passes messages along. He is licensed in all Florida courts and has handled criminal defense and post-conviction relief matters throughout the Tampa Bay area, including Pinellas County and Clearwater. If you are ready to find out whether your record qualifies for sealing or expungement, contact OA Law Firm to schedule a consultation. Attorney Abdelghany will review the specifics of your case and give you a direct answer about your options as a Clearwater record expungement client.
