The state itself cannot, but they can take away your privilege to drive in their state, and they can also ask your resident state to suspend your license.
Sort of. The Ohio DMV can report a violation California. California may then in turn suspend the license until the infraction in Ohio is cleared up.
In NSW Australia they suspend your drivers license and suspend your compulsory third party insurance
The answer depends on the agreement with the second state. Many do not suspend your license for an out of state violation, you would simply not be able to drive in the state that suspended you (in this case New York). NY cannot prevent you from driving in Oregon if you have an Oregon license, they can only refuse to allow you to drive in NY regardless of the state that issues your license. Oregon MAY choose to suspend your Oregon license completely, but that decision is made in Oregon.
As a general rule the answer is No but there is one big caveat; namely, because of the computer systems used by most jurisdictions this information may well be received by other jurisdictions where you have a drivers' license and that jurisdiction may suspend the license. A recent situation in a municipal court I appeared in demonstrated a very similar situation. The defendant was in court to try to negate a guilty plea he had entered to a moving violation where the NJ court did not suspend his license but another state had been notified of the guilty plea and on its own, suspended his out of state license. He was trying to withdraw his plea so that he could get his other license back. The Judge basically told him what I said above, i.e., NJ did not suspend his other license but because the other state had been notified of the violation, it was that state's policy to suspend the license.
No, not necessarily, not automatically, unless it was an awfully serious infraction.
In most cases, yes. Most states are members of the Interstate Drivers License Compact, where each state where a non-resident is cited or arrested agrees to notify the violator's home state of the violation. If the violation would suspend a drivers license in the state where it occurs, the violator's home state is supposed to suspend the license, as well. The only states that do not subscribe to the Interstate Drivers License Compact are Alaska, California, Georgia, Massachusetts, Michigan, Montana, Oregon, Tennessee and Wisconsin.
Yes, they can suspend your license. Texas has a right to protect the other drivers and the location of the violations doesn't matter.
They can suspend your ability to drive in Florida, regardless of where the license is from.
No, but they can take you to the court if you don't pay the debt and then court can suspend your license.
No, you can't.
in the state of pa it takes 5-6 points depending on the offenses and who the troopers are some troopers will let you go others will throw the book at youANSWERPA will suspend your license when you reach 6 points. You can take a driving class to remove your points, or just go for 12 consecutive months without receiveing another violation. ...12 consecutive months per point without receiveing another violation .
No