no they can not do that
They will usually suspend your license and issue a warrant for your arrest.
The question is not worded correctly or is using the wrong terminology. You cannot put a lien on a state-issued drivers license. Note: In the state of Florida a towing company can place a lien on your drivers license for unpaid fines owed to them. While this will not suspend your drivers license it will prevent you from renewing your tag or getting a new tag until the monies owed to the company is paid.
DUI/DWAI, unpaid citations, accruing too many points, medical reasons.
Any state can suspend your license if you were driving on their roads. For instance, my license is an Indiana license. Michigan can't suspend my license because they don't have jurisdiction in Indiana. Michigan can, however, suspend my license if I was driving on Michigan's roads.
There is no statuteo fo limitations on unpaid traffic tickets in Oregon or any other state. Usually they will suspend your license and issue a warrant for your arrest.
Probably so im sorry
The IRS does not have the authority to suspend a person's nursing license. Nursing licenses are typically regulated by state nursing boards based on criteria set by state laws and regulations. However, unpaid taxes could potentially lead to professional license suspension if a state board has provisions allowing for such action.
DUI/DWAI, unpaid citations, accruing too many points, medical reasons.
Yes, if you have an unpaid traffic ticket that has gone to a warrant in Texas you will be unable to get a drivers license in any other state.
Usually in Texas they suspend your license and send the fines to a collection agency. There is no difference in the warrants. If you are stopped with a suspended license you will usually go to jail.
They seldom will withhold a license for unpaid tickets in another state. However, if they have suspended your license in California, you would not be able to get one.
An unpaid traffic ticket goes into "failure to appear" status. Normally when this happens, the court sends a notice to the DMV to suspend your driver's license and/or a warrant is issued. They only get released and are removed from your record (and replaced with the proper adjudication) when you pay them off.