No, but they can take you to the court if you don't pay the debt and then court can suspend your license.
Yes, they have the authority to suspend a license. They are the issuing authority and responsible for issuing a license. They can revoke it as well.
That would be no, if I'm driving in Indiana, Michigan can't come in and suspend my license because they don't have jurisdiction in Indiana. However, Michigan could suspend my Indiana license if I was driving in Michigan.
Yes, if the infraction happened inside the state lines. however, they won't suspend the license themselves, but will request Ohio to suspend it.
Yes, they can suspend your license. Texas has a right to protect the other drivers and the location of the violations doesn't matter.
If you were driving on Massachusetts roads then yes they can.
Typically the government agency that issued the license.
No
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 can suspend your ability to drive in Florida, regardless of where the license is from.
Only if they are licensed in another state and only if that state requires a license. If no license is required, any agency can collect there.
Your collection agency will have the procedure, that's all the government will tell me.
a license for every state that you are going to do collections with and money for starts
No, you can't.
No
A Commercial Collection Agency is and agency that collects debt on behalf of their clients, same as a consumer collection agency, but a commercial collection agency collects business to business.
Pennsylvania can suspend an out-of-state license holder's privilege to drive in the state of Pennsylvania, but they cannot actually suspend the license of an out-of-state driver. They can request for that state to suspend it on their behalf, but that state has no obligation to comply.
No. A drivers' license is issued by the DPS and only the DPS - or a court - can suspend someone's license. However, if Texas requires insurance and you don't have it, if an insurance company notifies DPS that you don't have insurance, then DPS could suspend your license.