Martinsville, Morgan County, Indiana Expungement Attorney with Money Back Guarantee

If you have questions about Indiana expungement, call me, Jeff Cardella, at 317-695-7700 or email me for a free consultation. I have handled thousands of Expungements, have a success rate of well over 99%, and provide a 100% unconditional money back guarantee on ALL Expungements.

If you have an old Indiana arrest, dismissed case, misdemeanor conviction, Level 6 felony, D felony, or eligible major felony conviction, the county where the case was filed matters. Indiana expungement law is statewide, but expungement petitions are normally filed in the county where the arrest, charge, or conviction occurred. That means an Indianapolis expungement may be handled in Marion County, a Fort Wayne expungement may be handled in Allen County, a South Bend expungement may be handled in St. Joseph County, and a Bloomington expungement may be handled in Monroe County. Probation transfers can sometimes involve multiple counties.

I, Jeff Cardella, help clients with expungements throughout the entire State of Indiana. Most expungement cases do not require an office visit, and many do not require a court appearance. Because expungement work is usually handled through court filings, record review, prosecutor notice, and final court orders, my office can help people clear records in counties all across Indiana without requiring them to travel back to the county where the old case occurred.

This page is my statewide Indiana expungement county list. It is designed to help you find the county-specific page for the county where your case was filed. If you want a detailed explanation of the Indiana Second Chance Law, waiting periods, misdemeanor expungements, felony expungements, dismissed case expungements, early expungements, gun rights, and common expungement mistakes, read my Indiana Expungement Law Guide, FAQ, and Cheat Sheets.

Why the County Matters in an Indiana Expungement Case

Indiana expungement law is found in Indiana Code 35-38-9, but the petition itself is filed in the county connected to the case. This is important because every county has its own clerk’s office, prosecutor’s office, court staff, filing practices, docket speed, and local expectations. Some counties process straightforward expungements quickly. Other counties may take longer, request additional information, or schedule hearings in situations where another county might rule on the paperwork alone.

The legal rules are not supposed to change from county to county, but the practical experience often does. A petition in Marion County may move differently from a petition in Hamilton County, Hendricks County, Lake County, Vanderburgh County, Allen County, or a smaller county where expungement petitions may be filed less often. A strong expungement lawyer needs to understand both the statewide statute and the practical details that can affect how a case moves through a particular court.

Multi-County Expungements Must Be Handled Carefully

A major reason to hire an experienced Indiana expungement lawyer is that many people have more than one case. Sometimes all cases are in one county. Other times, a person has cases in several different counties because they moved, worked in another city, went to college somewhere else, drove through another county, or had old cases from different periods of life.

This matters because conviction expungements are generally treated as a one-time opportunity. If you file in one county without reviewing your full Indiana record, you may accidentally leave out another eligible conviction in a different county. That can create serious problems. It is important to obtain your full record so we can decide whether multiple counties need to be handled together, whether the waiting periods have been satisfied, whether any unpaid fines or restitution could delay the case, and whether an early expungement strategy makes sense.

Most Indiana Expungement Cases Can Be Handled Remotely

Many clients no longer live in the county where the old case happened. Some no longer live in Indiana at all. That usually does not prevent an expungement case from moving forward. In most cases, I can review eligibility by email using your date of birth, the exact spelling of your name as it appears in Indiana court records, and any case information you already have.

After the record is reviewed, my office can prepare the petition, file it in the proper county, monitor the case, respond to issues, and follow up after the court grants the petition. If a hearing is required, I explain what to expect and help you prepare. However, many straightforward expungement cases are resolved without the client ever needing to appear in court.

 Find Your Indiana Expungement County Page

Use the directory below to find the county-specific expungement page for the county where your arrest, charge, or conviction occurred. If you are not sure which county handled your case, contact me with your date of birth and the exact spelling of your name as it appears on mycase.in.gov, and I can help you determine where the expungement petition may need to be filed.

Adams County Through Dubois County

Elkhart County Through Lake County

LaPorte County Through Porter County

Posey County Through Whitley County

Common County Filing Issues in Indiana Expungement Cases

County filing issues are one of the reasons people should be careful before attempting an expungement on their own. Sometimes an old case was filed under a slightly different name. Sometimes a felony was later reduced to a misdemeanor. Sometimes a dismissed charge and a conviction appear under the same cause number. Sometimes there are unpaid court costs, old probation issues, or multiple cases in different counties. Sometimes a person thinks the case was in one county when the court record shows it was filed somewhere else.

These details matter. A petition filed in the wrong county, filed too early, filed without all necessary cases, or filed without addressing a predictable objection can create delay or denial. My goal is to identify these issues before filing so the expungement has the best chance of being granted as efficiently as possible.

Indiana Expungement County FAQ

Do I need an expungement lawyer in the same county where my case happened?

No. For most Indiana expungement cases, you do not need to hire a lawyer physically located in the county where the old case occurred. What matters is whether the lawyer understands Indiana expungement law, knows how to review the full record, files the petition correctly, and follows through after the order is granted.

What if I have cases in more than one Indiana county?

Multi-county expungements must be handled carefully. If you have conviction cases in more than one county, those cases usually need to be reviewed together before anything is filed. Filing one county first without checking the rest of the record can create problems because Indiana generally gives people one lifetime opportunity to expunge convictions.

What if I do not know which county handled my case?

That is common. Many people remember the city, the police department, or the general area but do not remember the exact county or court. Send me your date of birth and the exact spelling of your name as it appears in Indiana court records, and I can help determine where the old case appears to have been filed. In some situations, it might be necessary to run a fingerprint background check through the FBI and Indiana State Police.

Can I clear an Indiana record if I no longer live in Indiana?

Yes, many clients no longer live in Indiana when they decide to pursue expungement. In most cases, the process can begin by phone and email. If a hearing is not required, you may never need to travel back to Indiana.

Will the county page tell me whether I qualify?

The county pages provide general information about expungement services in that county, but eligibility depends on your specific record. The type of case, date of conviction, sentence, unpaid obligations, new convictions, pending charges, and the number of counties involved can all matter. For a broader explanation of eligibility, review my Indiana Expungement Law Guide.

What should I send for a free expungement review?

The most helpful information is your date of birth, the exact spelling of your name as it appears in Indiana court records, and any counties where you believe you had cases. If you have cause numbers, old paperwork, sentencing documents, background-check results, or mycase.in.gov screenshots, those can help too, but you do not need to have everything before contacting me.

Contact Jeff Cardella for a Free Consultation

If you have additional questions, call me for a free consultation to discuss your case.

Phone: 317-695-7700

Email: jeffcardella@cardellalawoffice.com

Address: 350 Massachusetts Ave #357, Indianapolis, IN 46204

Counties We Serve

I handle criminal defense cases throughout the entire State of Indiana, with a focus on the following locations:

DISCLAIMER - The information contained on this website is provided for educational and informational purposes only, and should not be construed as legal advice or as an offer to perform legal services on any subject matter. The content of this website contains general information and may not reflect current legal developments or information. The information is not guaranteed to be correct, complete, or current. We make no warranty, expressed, or implied, about the accuracy or reliability of the information at this website or at any other website to which it is linked. Recipients of content from this site should not act or refrain from acting on the basis of any information included in the site without seeking appropriate legal advice on the particular facts and circumstances at issue from an Indiana Criminal Defense attorney or attorney licensed in the recipient’s state. Nothing herein is intended to create an attorney-client relationship and shall not be construed as legal advice. This is not an offer to represent you, nor is it intended to create an attorney-client relationship.