You will need a lawyer and money to find out the answer.
If you are legally "Convicted" then Adjudication IS NOT Withheld....the whole reason for a Judge to have the option of Adj With is to stop short of convicting....IF you have a felony charge - and adjudication is withheld - you are not convicted....
Legally, yes. A firearm is defined as the receiver (frame) Even when it has been taken apart, the receiver is still legally a firearm.
possible. the lawyer can secure an expungement of a criminal record, but only AFTER a time period.
Another word for adjudication is arbitration. Both terms refer to the process of legally resolving a dispute or making a formal decision.
A felon is no longer allowed to legally carry a firearm.
Be of legal age and not be legally disqualified from purchasing a firearm.
No not legally.
NO
Please understand that this is not legal advice. That said, the answer to this question depends on what state you're in. In some states, like Kentucky, an adjudication is equal to a conviction. In other states, like Michigan and Virginia, which make "adjudication" and "conviction" legally different things (like for instance, a juvenile adjudication versus adult conviction) an adjudication is NOT a conviction. Federal law concurs. In a case where two men with juvenile records were arrested as "felons in possession" of firearms, US District courts rules that in states that make the distinction, a person adjudicated of a crime is NOT prohibited from possessing a firearm since they have not be convicted.
Only if you legally possess the firearm in accordance with federal and state laws.
Yes
You can't.