Sadly if the cop is a dick he can... The kinder officers will not but if he is an @$$#0!3 he can do it and is with in full regulation. But this is California law, it may be different in other states.
It all depends on whether its your car or not
you will get a ticket and probably get your license suspended for longer and insurance will probably not cover the accident b/c you were driving with a suspended license but of course this is just one scenario
If you have a suspended licence, you shouldn't be driving. By doing so you are breaking the law and so the police officer would be within his rights to pull you over. What car you are driving has no bearing on whether you are allowed to drive or not, having a suspended licence does.
It's usually the same punishment as if they were driving their own car.
The driver will receive another violation for "Driving While Suspended," and it is POSSIBLE that the owner of the vehicle may receive a ticket for "Permitting an Un-licensed Operator."
I think it depends on your car insurance policy.
No, if their license was suspended they should not be driving, if they are involved in an accident and are at fault the other person can go after you since it is your car and then you are liable.
DUR means Driving Under Restraint, it applies when someone drives with a suspended license, drunk, without possession of a license, minor driver's license so on.
Not in Tennessee, and I don't imagine it would happen anywhere else either. The car may be towed, but I can't think of anything they could do to your license.
No No
Yes, it is. Knowingly or unknowingly really is irrelevant - you're driving on a suspended licence, and the courts will always reject a claim of someone not knowing their licence was suspended. And rightfully so. "I thought my license expired next year" might be believable. "I thought the police, DMV, and judge were just kidding" is not. I actually researched this and found that when the ticket is actually labeled "driving while license unkowingly suspended or revoked" has no points involed unless you do this repeatedly. And this being so because there have been cases where an insurance company has dropped a client and that person never received notification-or has yet to receive it; and consequently their license was suspended.
Yes. The fact that your license is suspended is NOT considered a contributing circumstance to an accident.