Of course NOT!
What would give you that idea?
If you have unpaid tickets in one state a court there can issue a warrant for your arrest, no matter how many states you have moved to and new driver's licences you have been issued.
Yes, if you move to another state, a ticket from your current state can affect your insurance. It can also affect your driver's license depending on what the ticket was for and if points were credited to your driver's license.
No. Not until your license is reinstated in your state. No state will give you a license until you clear that up.
Only in the state in which it was issued.
Typically when you get a driver's license in a new state the tickets that appear on the old driver's license do not transfer. Accidents do however stay on the CLUE database and will follow you everywhere. Technically if have tickets in another state and don't disclose them to the new insurance company in the new state you are making a material misrepresentation on the application which has the potential to get a claim denied at some point in time. I personally don't know of that happening but there is always the extreme case.
You can DRIVE in Washington state with an Aussie license as a tourist, but if you permanently move there you have to take the same test as the locals and pass it to get a Washington license. It's not just a swap.
When you move to your new state of residence you will have to report in person to that state's DMV agency and apply in person. You will have to surrender your former state's drivers license at the time you are issued the new license.
After you move to IL, apply at the DMV for an IL license? They will issue you an IL license (if you are eligible). You must surrender your IN license and they will notify IN to cancel it. You are not allowed (federal law) to possess a drivers license from more than one state (your 'home' state).
A Maryland speeding ticket will be reported to new Jersey and it will be two points against your driving license. There are only a few states that do not report speeding tickets to other states and Maryland is not one of them. A Maryland speeding ticket attorney can often get a probation before judgment and that does keep it off your record.
yes
Yes
You have to get a new license when your current one expires or if you move to a new state and need to update your information.
Yes it is nationwide. If your license is suspended for non-payment of child support in state "A" and you move to state "B", state "B" will not issue you a new license until your suspension is cleared by state "A".