Williams v. Commonwealth
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The Supreme Court reversed the judgment of the circuit court denying Appellant's petition for an expungement under Va. Code 19.2-392.2, holding that, in light of this Court's clarification of the standard that applies to the review of expungement petitions when the claim is that the original charge was "otherwise dismissed," remand was appropriate.
Appellant was arrested on the charge of accessory after the fact of homicide and pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice, an amended charge. Appellant later filed a petition for expungement, arguing that the accessory after the fact of homicide charge qualified for expungement because it was "otherwise dismissed." The circuit court denied the petition on the grounds that the original charge that was later amended was not "completely separate and unrelated." The Supreme Court reversed, holding that where the circuit court did not rely on a Blockburger comparison of the elements to deny the expungement petition, remand was necessary.
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