Depends on the specific conviction.
upon application to purchase a firearm a NCIC check is conducted, at which time the out of state conviction will show and your firearm application denied
A felony does not go away unless the conviction is expunged from your record by govt. officials. Because of this, it doesn't matter how long ago you were convicted of a felony, owning, purchasing, or being in possession of a firearm is illegal.
In the United States, there is no certain number of years. If you are a felon, you cannot own a gun unless you have successfully petitioned to have your gun rights restored.
It is generally illegal for someone with a felony conviction to carry a firearm in Florida. Felons are prohibited from possessing or owning firearms under both federal and state laws, including carrying a concealed weapon. Violating these laws can result in serious criminal charges and penalties.
Depends specifically on what the misdemeanor is. Most will not prohibit you from owning or purchasing a firearm. Some will. For example, any domestic violence conviction will do it.
Nothing. This is America. A felony conviction, or domestic violence conviction. ******** EDIT ************* There are additional conditions, listed in the 1968 Gun Control Act. See above
You can't. BTW, knowlingly owning a firearm with the serial number defaced is a felony.
The Federal law has an absolute prohibition of felons owning or even handling firearms According to Arizona law, you must have your felony conviction expunged, or set aside, in the jurisdiction you were convicted in. Once this is completed, you must petition to the court, a minimum of two years after the fines are paid, to restore your gun rights. If you possess a firearm without doing this, you will be charged with a felony.
Code violations do not (normally) rise to the level of felony offenses. SO, on that basis, it probably will not prevent your from owning one.
Only if your state firearm's privilege were restored via expungement of your felony conviction (if allowed in your state). If you are a federally convicted felon, there is no chance.
Not sure what you mean by "class you" but any felony precludes a person from owning a firearm and no state will issue a firearms permit to somone who is a felon, unless you have had your rights restored.