No. There is no requirement in the law that officers must have their hats on when they pull you over. Many departments have internal "wearing of the uniform" guidelines that specify when they would like you to wear a hat to present a neat and professional appearance, but it is not a legal requirement.
No he does not need to have a badge on his uniform. An ID card or embroidered depiction of the agency's badge is sufficient.
No, but department policy may require it.
Registration.
no, a police officer can request you to stop videotaping them for safety reasons. often guns are hidden inside of cellphones and video recorders
How is the Police Officer going to know your license is expired?? Unless you do something to Merit being pulled over the Police Officer will not know. However I would not want to be you when the Officer pulls you over and finds it is expired and you knew about it. Good Luck.
It depends on the specific laws where you are at. He may simply issue a citation or he could have the car impounded.
A police officer doesn't have to ask you for anything. The officer generally asks for a driver's license and/or proof of insurance, but, by no means is that a requirement.
If a police officer ever pulls you over and asks you do to this, you should do that. When they say to step out, you should. If you don't, they could give you an extra ticket for that.
No, you would get arrested for driving on an invalid license and your car would just get towed.
What happens if u impersonate a police officer over the phone
A citizen can not pull over a police officer for bending the law, but you can report them to the superiors of their Police Department.
Georgia does not have a statue of limitations on speeding tickets. When a police officer pulls you over again, that ticket will appear on his computer as paid or unpaid.
diplomatic tags entitle you to nothing unless you are a foreign diplomat. being a diplomat of a foreign country means you have immunity from the laws of the nation you are serving in. ex......police officer pulls over a foreign diplomat for speeding the police officer would be out of his or her jurisdiction and can not enforce the law upon a foreign diplomat.
If the officer pulled you over then he had a reason otherwise that is illegal. He can issue the ticket based on that reason. That is called probable cause. If an officer pulls you over and can not articulate probable cause then he must immediately release you because it would then be an illegal detention.Another View: In many (most?/all?) states officers are allowed to conduct random 'spot checks' of motorists to determine if they are operating in conformance with the state's laws regarding proper licensing, registration and insurance compliance.