The percentage of black-owned firms is 0%, and the percentage of women-owned firms is 30.6%. The total number of firms, at last estimate, was 65,497. The per capita income is $14,222, the median household income is $34,146, and 34.8% of the persons in Hidalgo County are considered below poverty level. The median home value is $78,100, there are 217,691 households, an average of 3.60 persons per household. 61.8% have a high school degree or higher, and 15.9% have a Bachelor degree or higher. The land area is 1,570.87 square miles and there are 493.2 persons per square mile.ĩ7.1% of the population is White, 0.8% is Black or African American, 91% is Hispanic or Latino, 1.1% is Asian, 0.5% is American Indian or Alaska Native, 0% is Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, and 0.4% is two or more races. The 2014 population estimate is 831,073 and the 2010 census population was 774,773. The County Seat is Edinburg and the largest city is McAllen. If the Court finds that the person is entitled to expunction of any records and files that are the subject of the petition, it shall enter an order directing expunction and directing each agency to turn in its records to the district clerk, or certify to the court that the records have been destroyed and delete all relevant information of the arrest from its computer/electronic files.Hidalgo County is located in the South Texas Region of Texas. The Petition for Expunction of Records is assigned a civil case number and the case is set for hearing NO SOONER THAN 30 days from the date the petition is filed.Įvery official entity or agency having records of the subject arrest must be served with a copy of the Petition and must be notified of the hearing date. If the Defendant in a criminal trial is ACQUITTED, his defense attorney should request that the trial court enter an Order of Expunction no later than 30 days after the date of acquittal.Ī person otherwise entitled to an Expunction of Records, but who was tried and found Not Guilty, must file a Petition for Expunction of Records in the district court for the county in which either: 1) the defendant was arrested, or 2) the offense was alleged to have occurred. The person has not been convicted of a felony in the five years preceding the date of arrest. (This provision “knocks out” all deferred adjudication offenses of a Class B misdemeanor level and above.)
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