A former Bloomington college student who faced decades in prison for dealing drugs on campus will have to wait for the public records of his offenses to be sealed, a judge ruled on Friday. Tanner Tattini was a freshman at Illinois Wesleyan University in 2015 when he was charged with dealing drugs near a school. The 19-year-old student was arrested after he sold cocaine to an undercover officer near the Illinois State University campus. Joshua Rinker, defense lawyer for Tanner Tattini, asked a judge to approve a request to seal the public records related to Tattini’s case. Rinker argued that Tattini, now 24, has done everything required of him to qualify for closing the records to public view. The closure is intended to provide ex-offenders a path to employment and other opportunities frequently blocked when information about convictions is easily available, said Rinker.