Franklin County, News, Phil Campbell, Red Bay, RSS Facebook, RSS General, RSS Twitter, Russellville
 By  Staff Reports Published 
2:29 pm Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Bedford’s expungement bill now law

Sen. Roger Bedford and Gov. Robert Bentley pose after Bentley signed Bedford’s expungement bill into law on June 17.

Sen. Roger Bedford and Gov. Robert Bentley pose after Bentley signed Bedford’s expungement bill into law on June 17.

On June 17, Gov. Robert Bentley signed a bill authored by Sen. Roger Bedford (D-Russellville) that allows a person charged with certain misdemeanor criminal offenses, traffic violations, or municipal ordinance violations to have their record expunged under certain conditions.

The criminal expungement bill was written to provide relief for thousands of innocent Alabamians who are mistakenly arrested, acquitted or found not guilty, but are unduly burdened with an arrest record that could interfere with employment opportunities, college admission, or military service.

“I am so proud that the expungement bill for which I fought so long and hard, is becoming law,” Bedford said.

“Until today, Alabama has been one of the few states in the nation where when you are charged with something and later found not guilty or that charge was thrown out, it remained on your record for the rest of your life. I’ve never thought that was fair, so I fought to change it.”

Beginning July 17, individuals will be able to apply for an expungement in circuit court, regardless of the venue the original offense was adjudicated.

If granted by a judge, those eligible records would cease to be available to the public in court records, police records and on National Crime Information Center background checks.

Violent Felony charges are not eligible for expungement. Under Alabama law, those offenses include murder, assault, rape, burglary, robbery, kidnapping and extortion.

The criteria for expungement includes:
•    If 90 days has passed from the date of dismissal with prejudice, acquittal, nolle prosequi or when a grand jury decides not to move forward with charges.
•    If five years have passed since the charge was dismissed without prejudice.
•    If the person has been found not guilty.
•    If one year has passed since the charge was dismissed after successful completion of a drug court program, mental health court program, diversion program or veteran’s court program.

Also on Franklin County Times
Sorrell wants second term
Main, News
Bernie Delinski For the FCT 
February 4, 2026
MONTGOMERY — State Auditor Andrew Sorrell, a graduate of Muscle Shoals High School and the University of North Alabama, said his desire to continue se...
Winter’s first storm was a chilling reminder …
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
February 4, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE – Area utilities officials said local electrical infrastructure help up well overall during the area’s first winter blast, but they remin...
2 nominated for Bryant-Jordan Awards
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
February 4, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Russellville High School seniors Lakin Derrick and Bryson Cooper have been nominated for Bryant-Jordan Awards, a statewide program that...
Blaze destroys home, family of 4 displaced
News, Russellville
Kevin Taylor For the FCT 
February 4, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE – A family of four has been displaced after their home was destroyed by fire Sunday night on the 4400 block of County Road 36. At least 3...
Belgreen elementary celebrates 100th day
Belgreen Bulldogs, News, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
February 4, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE Elementary students at Belgreen High School celebrated the 100th day of school by dressing up as 100 year olds. “The 100th day of school ...
Gold City comes to Roxy on March 13
Columnists, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
February 4, 2026
As president of the Franklin County Arts and Humanities Council, I see firsthand how the historic Roxy Theatre functions as more than a performance sp...
AI is a new tool, but not a solution
Columnists, Opinion
February 4, 2026
I’ve practiced family medicine in Auburn long enough to know most parents aren’t turning to artificial intelligence because they distrust doctors. The...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *