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Can A DWI Be Expunged Or Sealed In Suffolk County?

Can A DWI Be Expunged Or Sealed In Suffolk County?

If you’re worried about how a past DWI affects your future, you’re not alone. I regularly meet Suffolk County residents who want to know whether a DWI can be wiped away, or at least hidden from view. Here’s what we can do about it.

The Short Answer

New York does not offer traditional “expungement” for most adult criminal convictions, including DWI. However, New York does allow certain convictions to be sealed, and in some situations a DWI may qualify for sealing under CPL §160.59 after a waiting period. Separately, many non-conviction outcomes (dismissals) are sealed automatically, and certain lesser alcohol-related dispositions are treated differently than a DWI crime. The details matter, and that’s where a tailored strategy comes in.

Expungement Versus Sealing In New York

Expungement- permanently erases a conviction as if it never existed. New York rarely provides this remedy for adult convictions.
Sealing- restricts who can see the record. If a case is sealed, the public and most employers cannot access it, but law enforcement, prosecutors, and the courts can, and certain government-regulated employers may still have lawful access.

DWI Versus DWAI: Why The Charge Title Matters

New York’s alcohol-related driving laws include both crimes and non-crimes:

  • DWI (VTL §1192(2), (3), (4), (4-a), (2-a)) is typically a misdemeanor for a first offense and can be a felony if there are certain aggravators or a prior within ten years.
  • DWAIDriving While Ability Impaired (VTL §1192(1)) is usually a traffic infraction, not a crime.

This difference is crucial. A DWAI infraction does not show up on a criminal history the same way a misdemeanor or felony does, and different sealing rules apply. Meanwhile, the DMV driving record is its own system with its own retention rules—sealing a court file does not make a DMV entry vanish.

When A DWI Might Be Sealable Under CPL §160.59

New York’s sealing statute lets a court seal up to two convictions total (only one may be a felony) if specific conditions are met. Key points:

  • Waiting Period: Generally 10 years from the date of sentencing or release from custody, whichever is later, not counting time spent in custody on other cases.
  • Disqualifiers: Certain serious offenses can’t be sealed. While DWI itself isn’t categorically excluded, related facts can matter (for example, a vehicle-related offense that also qualifies as a violent felony would be excluded).
  • Clean Record Since: The court will care about what you’ve done during those ten years—employment, education, community ties, treatment completion, and an absence of new criminal problems help.
  • Number Of Convictions: If you have more than two criminal convictions on your record statewide (with limited exceptions), sealing may be off the table.

If you’re eligible, we file a motion with supporting documents. The Suffolk County District Attorney can consent or oppose. A judge ultimately decides after weighing statutory factors.

What The Judge Considers

  • The time elapsed since the offense
  • The seriousness of the underlying conduct and any harm
  • Your rehabilitation—treatment, counseling, education, work history
  • Community contributions and letters of support
  • The benefit to you versus any public-safety concern

A thoughtful, well-documented application makes a real difference.

What Gets Sealed—And What Doesn’t

  • Court and Criminal History: If the court grants sealing, the criminal case file is hidden from public view and most background checks.
  • Law Enforcement Access: Police, prosecutors, and courts retain access for limited, lawful purposes.
  • DMV Records: Sealing does not erase DMV history. License points, prior alcohol-related incidents, and administrative notations typically remain available to DMV and may factor into future licensing decisions or penalties.
  • News Articles/Internet: Court sealing does not force private websites or news outlets to remove stories. There are separate reputation-management strategies for that.

What If The Case Was Dismissed Or Resolved As A Violation?

Dismissed/Acquitted: Under CPL §160.50, cases that end in your favor (dismissal, acquittal) are generally sealed automatically.
Violations and Infractions (Including Many DWAIs): Under CPL §160.55, many violations are sealed in the criminal-history system, but again the DMV driving abstract is different. You may still see an entry on the driving record even when the criminal file is sealed.

Common Suffolk County Scenarios

First-Offense DWI From Many Years Ago: If more than 10 years have passed, you have no new convictions, and you’ve built a stable life, you may be a strong candidate for sealing.
Reduced To DWAI: You likely avoided a criminal conviction, but DMV may still show an alcohol-related incident. We focus on protecting your employment background while advising on how DMV entries may affect insurance or future penalties.
Felony DWI With Good Rehabilitation: You can seek sealing of one felony if otherwise eligible. Success turns on documentation and advocacy.
Recent Case: If your case is pending or recent, we concentrate on defending the charge now. Outcomes we can negotiate today may position you better for the long term.

The Process And Timeline

Eligibility Review: I analyze your complete New York record, the exact statute(s) of conviction, and the ten-year waiting calculation.
Document Gathering: Proof of employment, education, treatment, community service, character letters, and anything else showing growth.
Drafting The Motion: A persuasive memorandum tying your story to the statutory factors, plus exhibits.
DA’s Position: The Suffolk County DA can object, consent, or take no position.
Hearing And Decision: Some cases are decided on papers; others include argument. If granted, the clerk transmits the sealing order to relevant agencies for implementation.

Mistakes To Avoid

DIY Without A Full Record Pull: Small details (like an old violation in another county) can derail eligibility if not addressed up front.
Promising Employers “It’s Gone Forever”: Sealing is powerful, but it isn’t expungement, and DMV/agency access still exists.
Ignoring Online Footprints: If publicity is a concern, plan for content removal or suppression alongside the court motion.

How I Help

For more than three decades I’ve defended people in Suffolk County courts and guided many through post-conviction relief. My approach is hands-on: I learn your goals, audit your record, and build a sealing motion that presents you at your best—organized, personal, and supported by evidence. If sealing isn’t available, I’ll be candid and pivot to other options, from certificate applications to proactive career-safe disclosures and reputation strategies.

You probably can’t expunge a DWI in New York, but sealing may be possible especially if enough time has passed, your record is otherwise limited, and you can demonstrate rehabilitation. The outcome is never automatic. It turns on careful eligibility analysis and strong presentation to the court.

Next Steps

If you’re wondering whether your Suffolk County DWI can be sealed—or how to protect your future—reach out. I’m Ed Palermo, and I’m ready to review your record, explain your options, and fight for the cleanest path forward. Call or send a message, and let’s get started.