Felon in a sentence as a noun

Joe Schmo from small Town, MN would have been a felon by now for doing the same with $10K.

Ever tried to get a job or apartment as a convicted felon?

He is a convicted felon and a puppet controlled by Russia.

One thing that caught my attention, was Lessig's comment in his post:" ... Aaron Swartz be labeled a felon.

Who better to do this than a convicted felon like Yanukovych?

The "nobody will hire him" comments may just be realistic, as most jobs, even low level jobs, screen out felons.

Do you take a guarantee of 6 months in federal prison and permanent felon status?

My probation officer told me, paraphrased "You'll be surprised who else has a felony.

Hi,I've had a felony for over 8 years now, and have been working as a developer almost the entire time.

In that world, the question this government needs to answer is why it was so necessary that Aaron Swartz be labeled a felon.

Even jobs one would think are amenable to felons, like oil roughnecks in North Dakota, are now staffed by large agencies who weed out felons.

"Everyone's a felon" and "everyone's violating the contract" is a terrible state of affairs.

Some states have strange and complicated laws about which crimes render you ineligible to vote, and many felons are not well versed in the law.

So many mundane things are a felony, and people need to understand that it isn't a life ending label before they jump to permanent solutions.

It's unambiguously illegal to lie about a felony conviction to get a government job.

As someone who has a wrongfully convicted, non-violent felon in the family, I can tell you it's easy to underestimate how difficult life becomes when you have a felony record.

Federal prosectors added nine new felony counts against well-known coder and activist Aaron Swartz, who was charged last year for allegedly breaching hacking laws by downloading millions of academic articles from a subscription database via an open connection at MIT. Ortiz today: Ultimately, any sentence imposed would have been up to the judge.

[1] The FBI tracks "justifiable homicides" by police -- which seems to range from 350 to 400 per year[2], and is limited to "The killing of a felon by a peace officer in the line of duty"[3] -- but it explicitly refuses to track all other killings by the police.

When political winds shift, you can eliminate anybody you want, because you just make an excel spreadsheet of political enemies and then forward it by email to law enforcement for increased survallence, and whamo, felony convictions, how much you want?

10 years?The government is just trying to maintain its power over the people, when federal reserve realizes there is no other alternative except to default on the US treasury, there is going to be a lot of unrest, and the internet will be a focus point of governmental rebellion, it's important everyone who accesses the internet is a felon.

Knowing the coming storm will hit you soon and there's nothing you can do to stop it?If there's any justfiable reason for ******* in this crazy world its being railroaded by a government with infinite resources and knowing that by the time you get out of prison you'll be 10 years older, never allowed to touch a computer, be seen as a horrible felon on par with Charles Manson, and come out deeply in debt and completely dead inside.

Felon definitions

noun

someone who has committed a crime or has been legally convicted of a crime

See also: criminal crook outlaw malefactor

noun

a purulent infection at the end of a finger or toe in the area surrounding the nail

See also: whitlow