You can probably become state-certified in that specialty, but the possibility of your being able to drive an emergency vehicle would be totally up to the agency or company that eventually may think of offering you employment.
Yes, this would be common and appropriate.
Not for traffic code violations. For more serious offenses (DUI/DWI - vehicular homicide - etc) perhaps.
You'd probably be charged with DUI and Vehicular Homicide, though there are other crimes that could also be charged, such as Manslaughter.
California has some of the most severe vehicular manslaughter laws in the country. If vehicular manslaughter occurs with a DUI, you are looking at-depending on the severity of intoxication-vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated, gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated, or second-degree murder. And, yes, these would be felony offenses. The law article below goes into more detail on vehicular manslaughter and vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated.
until hes 21 depending on the felonyAdded: Unless the felony involved the violation of some type of motor vehicle regulation (e.g.: DUI - Vehicular Homicide - etc), there is no automatic loss of license upon conviction of a non-vehicular felony offense.
You can get information on the Georgia DUI laws and penalties at the link below.
In Georgia, a DUI will become a felony on the fourth offense within ten years.A DUI becomes a felony in Georgia after the fourth offense within ten years
Georgia
In Georgia, a DUI will become a felony upon the fourth offense committed within ten years. Prior to that, they will be misdemeanors.
Georgia statute of limitations on a misdemeanor DUI is two years.
Sure. if it is traffic related it is a ticket. But some are certainly felonies such as DUI, habitual violator, vehicular manslaughter, etc.
Yes, DUI is a criminal offense in every state of the U.S., and most places in the world.