I see no reason why a police officer would risk his/her reputation, job, income, benefits et cetera to lie about a simple traffic offense such as DWI, of someone he/she just met at the time of the arrest.
I think what you mean is that if there are errors in the paperwork, a good lawyer can find them and fight the case in court.
In general, better be safe and not drive if one has been drinking alcohol.
yes. either by the complainant or the police officer has to fill out a police report before any charges can be filed on you. then it goes to the prosecuting attorney for them to decide if they want to pursue the matter on charges.
go to the police station where you filed the report and ask for the records department
It depends on the locality and local policies, but if no charges were filed, probably.
A chapter 13 Bankruptcy, dismissed, discharged, or otherwise, stays on your credit report for 7 years from the date it was filed.
The only way to find out for sure if a police report was filed against you is to contact your local police department. Some states do not make this information public.
yes, they can write a supplemental report to the original
There is no requirement that you be notified about ANY report filed against you - about the only way you might find out is if an officer or detective approached you to ask questions or conduct an investigation - OR - they might simply arrest you with no notification at all - OR - the police may not deem it worthy of police action and you may never hear anything about it.
Dismissed or completed? If it were dismissed, your credit report will show that you filed for bankruptcy. Obviously, if you filed bankruptcy your credit is not great. You certainly can buy a car for cash. Finding someone to lend you money; or getting a loan will be more difficult.
It will not go against your insurance because a claim has not been filed only a police report.
No. Filing a bankruptcy creates a public record that does not go away because you did not complete the bankruptcy. - once you file and get a case number you have filed for bankruptcy. if you didn't follow through and it got dismissed is regardless. you still filed for bankruptcy and it will still be on your credit report.
If the accident was reported to the police at the time it occurred, I believe a report can be filed, although it should have been filed ASAP. Check with your insurance company and state regulations.
AnswerIf you were in an accident with this person and a police report was filed, the police department will likely have this information. If a police report was not filed, you can either file a report after the fact or take the person to small claims court. The police and/or judge may be able to compel person in question to disclose the information.