You should not rely on any advice given without first hiring a lawyer in the area where the case is pending, and providing that lawyer with full information. You must also be pardoned on all alcohol-related District Court misdemeanor convictions from Oklahoma and any other state. To be eligible for a liquor license, you must be pardoned on ALL felonies (Oklahoma, other states and Federal). Advice given by me on this website is general advice based on partial information. A pardon does not remove the conviction from your record. The questioner and any reader do not have an attorney-client relationship formed by our communications on this website. You can contact me at my office at 77 or by email through this website. Give a call if you need information we'll be able to put a plan together to keep you in business, and depending on the charges, keep you from even having a felony conviction. Such a person, to lawfully hold a liquor license or otherwise enjoy any ownership interest in a bar, must be pardoned of any and all felony convictions. Of course I can handle the criminal aspects of the pending charges, and I work well with one of the two best alcohol license attorneys in the state. Oklahoma has one of the very strictest laws in the country in this regard. That's why you need to handle the felony, and the DUI, and the liquor license issue as one important matter. So, yes, if the cases end in convictions, a liquor license renewal could be denied. ![]() In addition to the prior good answer, consider that conviction of either one, if not disclosed, could be reason to deny a liquor license.
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