
Expungement
A criminal conviction doesn’t have to follow you forever. California law provides a path to clear eligible convictions from your record — and the difference between having a conviction on your record and having it dismissed can determine whether you get a job, keep a professional license, or qualify for housing. At the Law Office of Nic Cocis, we help clients in Murrieta and throughout Southwest Riverside County navigate the expungement process and understand exactly what relief is available based on their specific conviction.
How California Expungement Works
What Penal Code § 1203.4 Actually Does — and What It Doesn’t
California’s expungement statute — Penal Code § 1203.4 — allows individuals who have successfully completed probation to petition the court to withdraw their guilty or no contest plea, enter a not guilty plea, and have the case dismissed. For those convicted after trial, the court sets aside the verdict and dismisses the case. The practical effect is that the conviction no longer appears as a conviction for most private employment purposes, and the individual can honestly answer “no” to questions asking whether they’ve been convicted of a crime — with limited exceptions.
What expungement doesn’t do is equally important. It does not seal the record from law enforcement, from criminal courts in future proceedings, or from most licensing boards. It does not restore firearms rights if the underlying conviction was a felony or a qualifying domestic violence misdemeanor. It does not affect a sex offender registration obligation. It does not prevent immigration authorities from relying on the underlying conviction. And it does not expunge a conviction from federal records or the records of other states.
Despite those limitations, an expungement is still meaningfully valuable. Most private employers conduct background checks through commercial services that will not show the dismissed conviction after expungement. The ability to answer “no” on most job applications — honestly and legally — is a significant practical benefit.
Who Qualifies for Expungement
Eligibility under § 1203.4 requires that the petitioner completed probation — or was granted early termination of probation — and is not currently charged with a criminal offense, on probation, or serving a sentence. Both misdemeanor and felony convictions are eligible, though felony convictions that resulted in a state prison sentence (as opposed to county jail under Realignment) require a different petition process.
Certain offenses are categorically ineligible regardless of otherwise satisfying the requirements. Serious sex offenses against children under Penal Code § 1203.4(b) cannot be expunged. Convictions for offenses listed in Vehicle Code § 13555 — including DUI convictions — can be dismissed under § 1203.4 but will still be disclosed to the DMV and used to calculate prior DUI offenses for future charging purposes.
Reducing a Felony to a Misdemeanor First
For wobbler offenses — charges that could have been filed as either a misdemeanor or a felony — a separate petition under Penal Code § 17(b) can reduce the conviction to a misdemeanor before or alongside an expungement petition. This matters because a felony reduction to misdemeanor has additional benefits beyond expungement: it may restore certain civil rights, affects how the conviction is characterized on background checks, and in some cases affects professional licensing consequences. We evaluate § 17(b) eligibility in every felony expungement matter.
How We Can Help with Expungement
The expungement process involves filing a petition, a background check by the court, and in some cases a hearing. While the process can be done without an attorney, errors in the petition — incomplete documentation, failure to address outstanding fines, incorrect identification of the offense — result in denial. We handle the process correctly the first time.
Our expungement services include:
Early Termination of Probation
Clients who have not yet completed probation may be eligible for early termination under Penal Code § 1203.3, which the court can grant when the interests of justice and the interests of the probationer warrant it. Early termination makes a client immediately eligible for expungement rather than waiting out the remainder of the probation term. We evaluate early termination in every expungement case where the client is still on probation.
What to Expect When You Work with Us
Ready to Clear Your Record in Murrieta?
A past conviction doesn’t have to define your future. Contact the Law Office of Nic Cocis to find out what relief is available for your specific situation. We serve clients in Murrieta, Temecula, Menifee, Lake Elsinore, Wildomar, Winchester, Canyon Lake, French Valley, and throughout Southwest Riverside County.
Why Choose the Law Office of Nic Cocis?
Full Record Review
Evaluates every conviction for expungement and felony reduction eligibility — not just the most recent one
25+ Years of Criminal Defense
Deep familiarity with Riverside County court procedures and records
Practical Guidance
Advises on what expungement actually changes and what it doesn’t — so clients make informed decisions
Multilingual Services
English, Romanian, and Spanish available





