⚖️ 1. Expungement in Illinois (erasing a record)
What expungement means
- Expungement = your record is destroyed (treated like it never happened).
- It is the strongest form of record relief in Illinois.
✅ Who qualifies for expungement
Illinois is fairly strict. In general:
✔️ Most common eligibility
You can usually expunge cases where:
- Charges were dropped, dismissed, or you were found not guilty
- You were arrested but never charged
- A conviction was later reversed or vacated
👉 These often have no waiting period.
✔️ Some limited conviction-related situations
Expungement is rare for convictions, but possible if:
- You received court supervision and completed it successfully (with waiting periods depending on the offense)
- You received a pardon that authorizes expungement (more on that below)
❌ What usually cannot be expunged
- Most convictions (especially felonies)
- Certain serious offenses (e.g., DUI, domestic violence, sex offenses)
👉 Instead, those are usually handled through record sealing, not expungement.
⏳ Waiting periods (typical examples)
- Immediate: dismissed, acquitted, no charges
- Supervision cases: waiting period varies by offense
- Some other cases: 2–5 years+ depending on outcome
📝 How to apply
- File a petition in the circuit court where the case occurred
- Use standardized Illinois court forms
- A judge reviews and decides
Typical timeline: 3–6 months for a decision
🔒 2. Record Sealing (important alternative)
Even though you asked about expungement, in Illinois this matters a lot:
- Sealing hides the record from the public but not law enforcement
- Many convictions (including some felonies) can be sealed after waiting periods
👉 Illinois expanded sealing significantly, and a newer “Clean Slate” law will eventually automate sealing for many non-violent cases.
🏛️ 3. Pardons (Executive Clemency in Illinois)
What a pardon is
A pardon is granted by the Governor and:
- Forgives a conviction
- Does not automatically erase the record
🔑 Types of clemency in Illinois
- Pardon (forgiveness)
- Pardon + expungement authorization
- Commutation (reduces sentence)
👉 The key one for you:
- A pardon with authorization to expunge allows you to then go to court and remove the record.
📝 How to apply for a pardon
- Apply through the Illinois Prisoner Review Board
- They hold hearings and make recommendations to the Governor
⚠️ Important:
- Pardons are discretionary and relatively rare
- Often used for older convictions or rehabilitation cases
Executive Clemency and Expungement
🧠 Big picture (how Illinois works)
Here’s the simplest way to think about it:
- No conviction? → likely eligible for expungement
- Conviction? → usually sealing, not expungement
- Serious conviction you want erased? → may need a pardon first, then expungement
👍 Practical takeaway
Illinois gives you three main paths:
- Expungement → best outcome, but limited eligibility
- Sealing → most common for people with convictions
- Pardon → Expungement → for tougher or older cases
https://prb.illinois.gov/prbexclemex.html
An Expungement is the process of legally destroying, obliterating, or striking out records or information in files, computers, and other depositories relating to criminal charges. Illinois offers first-time offenders the opportunity to expunge or seal their criminal records for certain misdemeanor convictions. Felony convictions are not eligible for expungement or sealing with the exception of Class 4 felony drug possession and Class 4 felony prostitution (Criminal Identification Act- 20 ILCS 2630/5). Sealing records means to remove criminal records from public view. Only certain law enforcement agencies may have access to sealed records.
A pardon is granted by the Governor of Illinois. It frees an offender from further penalty and disabilities of a criminal conviction. A pardon also restores an individual’s civil rights. Felony convictions can only be expunged if a pardon was granted.
