Claudette Colvin , who was arrested for refusing to give up her seat to a white person on a Montgomery, Alabama , bus in 1955, is now fighting to clear her record. According to CNN, attorneys for the civil rights pioneer said they will file a request with a Montgomery County court on Tuesday, aiming to expunge her record. Colvin, now 82, was 15 years old when she was arrested and charged with two counts of violating the city's segregation ordinance, as well as one felony count of assaulting a police officer. Although she was convicted on all counts in juvenile court, the segregation convictions were overturned on appeal. Police said the teenager kicked and scratched an officer as she was being removed from the bus. "People said I was crazy," Colvin told CNN. "Because I was 15 years old and defiant and shouting, 'It's my constitutional right!'" In a statement she wrote as part of her motion to get her record expunged, Colvin said she wants society "to move forward and be better."...