New Jersey Police Have Waited Almost 2 Years To Expunge a Man's Criminal Record, Lawsuit Claims
Individuals are waiting months to have their criminal records expunged after court orders, according to a new lawsuit.

According to a new class-action lawsuit, police in New Jersey are taking as long as 20 months to comply with court-ordered expungement of individuals' criminal records.
Under New Jersey law, individuals can generally have their criminal records expunged after 10 years without a criminal conviction. Those convicted of substance use–related crimes, though, can have their records expunged as soon as they complete an addiction treatment "Recovery Court" program. Additionally, after the passage of a 2022 law, those who are convicted of certain crimes committed due to being victims of human trafficking can apply to have their records expunged any time after conviction.
But many individuals are waiting months, even years, to actually have their criminal records expunged after a judge has granted their request, according to the lawsuit, which was filed by the New Jersey Office of the Public Defender on Monday. Plaintiffs say that they have been rejected or chilled from employment, licensure, and volunteer opportunities after their record was revealed.
The New Jersey State Police (NJSP), which is tasked with administering expungements, has delayed processing expungement orders for the plaintiffs in the suit for at least several months. One plaintiff still has his criminal convictions on record 20 months after a court ordered his expungement.
"Plaintiffs, and the class members they seek to represent, share a common grievance— that the NJSP's extreme delay in processing expungement orders deprives them of their right to a timely expungement and its resultant benefits," the lawsuit reads. "Because of this delay, criminal records that should have been expunged have instead been repeatedly shared with employers and other entities, throughout the State and in other jurisdictions, by the NJSP, for months after petitioners' expungement orders were granted and received by the agency."
The lawsuit further alleges that the delay violates plaintiffs' rights under New Jersey civil rights statutes by "allowing their expungement orders to languish unprocessed for an unreasonable amount of time after such orders were received."
Individuals who have shown a longstanding commitment to living a law-abiding life shouldn't face the permanent punishment wrought by having their criminal convictions constantly appearing on background checks. While New Jersey law has thankfully embraced this idea, bureaucratic holdups from state police have continued to deny New Jerseyans the benefits of their court-ordered criminal record expungements.
"This increased delay is unacceptable and inexplainable given that the New Jersey State Police received $15 million from taxpayers to improve and modernize their expungement processing systems in 2019," Meredith Schalick, director of Rutgers Law School's Expungement Law Project, said in a statement to the New Jersey Monitor. "New Jersey can do better for people seeking a second chance, and the New Jersey State Police should be held accountable for failing to do their job."
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Perhaps is these scofflaws were imprisoned for contempt of court?
Treat them like republicans!
I’m certainly curious as to what New Jersey law says about someone who delays in carrying out a court order.
What if a “civilian” dragged his feet on, say, making a court-ordered child-support payment, or abating a nuisance, etc?
There may be nuances I don’t know about, but it seems to be, at minimum, something the relevant courts should investsigate.
Government frequently does things that private citizens or businesses would be fined or arrested for, but it's different, because government is special. Just ask them. Police routinely violate civil rights, but if they can do so in a new way, they get a pass. They routinely steal money from citizens but that's ok too because.. well...drugs, you know. And they routinely lie to citizens and are encouraged and trained to do so. We live in a police state and anyone who doesn't think so is living in a very sheltered world.
Imagine if they could shoot someone in the back for trespassing, eh sarc?
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FWIW - but consistent with your point - every so often at the Supreme Court a plaintiff or a defendant makes a motion to amend a filing out of time or some other motion reflecting some prior administrative failing. The SC has the discretion to grant the motion. I am a regular reader or the SC order pages, and I cannot recall an instance where a citizen's motion was granted, nor where the government's motion was denied
I know the 2nd amendment is more of a theoretical freedom that's mostly celebrated by the MAGA cult, but there's some news on "assault weapons bans" which could affect Washington.
Unfortunately, this is the 2nd time they've been struck down, and the second time no state has done shit about it.
"The judge has made his ruling, now let him enforce it"
Not sure what the big deal is. Expungement means very little. As far as I can tell all it means is that whatever was expunged can't be used against you in court, and even then only if you've got an attorney who will raise an objection. It's a myth that government destroys or hides information. Whatever was "expunged" will still show up in background checks and on the cop's computer if you get pulled over.
They would be in court to begin with if they weren’t guilty, right?
I'd suggest you enlighten yourself by talking with people who understand the system, but that would involve you learning.
I got it from you, ok?
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In the cauldron boil and bake;
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Wool of bat, and tongue of dog,
Adder’s fork, and blind-worm’s sting,
Lizard’s leg, and howlet’s wing,
For a charm of powerful trouble,
Like a hell-broth boil and bubble.
Double, double toil and trouble;
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GOP picks Tom Emmer as its nominee for House speaker
WHO?!!
The majority whip.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j_QLzthSkfM
Nikki Haley's boyfriend.
*unzips*
For her, or him, or both?
I could be in if Tom brings his majority whip to the party
Will Soros be watching?
two of the three attendees probably on his payroll so I assume yes.
Yay!
American hostages have waited 17 days to be saved is there a piece on this?
They're bringing back Shikha Dalmia to write a guest piece on bringing in the entirety of the Gaza strip to the US as Refugees.
I hear Minnesota is top in the running having already implemented No Go Zones.
You misspelled "No Gay Zones".
Not too local, I guess
https://twitter.com/DolioJ/status/1716679081494769752?t=8oCm7grtxE6zESwWLBjFNQ&s=19
This biggest takeaway here isn't about Hamas & Israel.
It's about how easily the left will justify killing defenseless women, elderly, and children to support their cause.
Learn that well.
[Link]
The same left that mandated masks and 100% safe and effective vaccines with no downsides? They’re trying to save women, elderly and children, my good sir.
https://twitter.com/AuronMacintyre/status/1716809397437882723?t=CDlPcoe9ezKT38Aa5Sh9gw&s=19
Let’s check in on the propositional nation
[Link]
Doesn’t anybody have a job anymore ?
It's probably just a staffing problem.
Some idiots convinced a lot of blue states that certain people's lives matter, and those in charge of said blue states responded with drastic reductions in their police forces - both by intentionally scaling them back, as well as encouraging cops to retire/quit by imposing draconian measures on them that prevent them from doing their job. Now they're shorthanded. And expunging records is, frankly, kinda low priority in the grand scheme of things they're responsible for handling.
Also, stop making me defend cops, Reason. FFS.
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Shit, you don’t even have to wait that long for a beer, Emma.
Or maybe the NJ police are dragging their heels because they hate to see leftist judges coddling career criminals.
Hey Emma, where is your story about the retired police chief that got run over by teens. The teens laughing and saying they would be out in 30 days. They even flip the family off in the courtroom.
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