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Wolf Signs Law To Seal Certain Criminal Records

Governor Tom Wolf has signed a bill to wipe clean criminal records for certain low-level offenders if they go a decade without any other convictions.

The so-called “Clean Slate” measure has garnered bipartisan support. Notably, Wolf and his gubernatorial challenger Scott Wagner agreed on the measure while the Republican was in the Senate.

Under the new law, people who serve a year or more in prison can petition courts to have their records sealed after 10 years, as long as they’ve made all their court-mandated payments.

Second or third-degree misdemeanors that require less than a two-year prison sentence are also eligible for automatic records-sealing.

Philadelphia Representative Jordan Harris said if people with sealed records are asked about prior convictions, it will be like the crime never happened.

“If this person is applying for a job, their answer is no,” he said. “And our hope is that folks who have ten years free from crime won’t commit any. Quite honestly, the statistics show that.”

Pennsylvania is the first state to pass such legislation.

But Wolf and other—largely Democratic —lawmakers are also pushing for a slate of other overhauls to the criminal justice system that have less bipartisan support.

They include making bail, probation, and parole laws more consistent, allocating state funding for indigent defense, and a number of programs aimed at helping people stay out of jail.