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The Second Look Act, which allows prisoners who have served at least twenty years to request hearings for resentencing, can save taxpayer funds and offer hope and in many cases something closer to justice for prisoners.
Under Rule 16-1009(a)(1)(B), a party to an action in which a case record is filed and a person who is the subject or is specifically identified in a case record may file a motion to permit inspection of a case record filed in that action that is not otherwise shielded from inspection under the access rules.
The Maryland Second Chance Act of 2015 authorizes the shielding of criminal records. Shielding is a process that lets you ask the court to remove certain kinds of records about certain criminal convictions from public view.
The REDEEM Act of 2023 will allow anyone convicted of a qualifying misdemeanor offense to expunge their record five years after completing their sentence terms. Similarly, those convicted of nonviolent felonies could qualify to request an expungement in only seven years.
What is restricted information? Adoption. Guardianship terminating parental rights. Juvenile delinquency. Child in need of assistance cases (CINA)
The Maryland Governor has enacted SB 37, also known as the REDEEM Act of 2023. This law reduces the waiting period for non-violent convictions' expungements.
Only the MVA can expunge minor traffic offenses. See Transportation Article § 16-117.1. Civil cases, including child support, liens, judgments, peace orders and protective orders CANNOT be expunged. If there is outstanding restitution, your petition for expungement may be denied by the court.
If the court seals the record, the whole case record cannot be opened without the judge's permission. If the court limits inspection, the court will clearly state what record may not be viewed by the public, and for how long. If the court denies the motion, the public will be able to see the record.