Only if all counts are tried simultaneously.
Its not a criminal offense but you can still go to jail for it.
In some states multiple DUI offenses ARE grounds for a criminal charge.
Not if you shave your own. However, shaving someone else's when they don't want you to, can be considered assault and would be considered a criminal offense.
Under the ex post facto rule, you cannot be charged with a criminal offense if it was not a criminal offense at the time you committed it. By the same token, if you committed a criminal offense that has since been repealed (meaning this is no longer a criminal offense) you still are considered having a criminal record for that offense.
Yes, it absolutely is considered criminal. One who drives under the influence can generally be punished with up to a year in jail for the first offense and with up to a multiple-year prison sentence for a repeat occurrence.
If you mean as opposed to just a plain traffic ticket offense? Yes, it is.
The ARREST record will still reflect that the arrest was for a felony offense, HOWEVER, if you are asked if you were ever CONVICTED of a felony, you can truthfully answer 'no.'
A person is a criminal when they have been convicted of a criminal offense. A criminal offense is one that has penalties that include any period of imprisonment, even if the imprisonment is not imposed as a consequence of the conviction.
It might depend on for what offense the citation was issued. Was it a traffic citation? Citations are sometimes issued for minor misdemeanors, in lieu of arrest. Misdemeanors ARE criminal offenses.
Do not entirely understand the question - but - yes, a 'violation' of a criminal statute is a synonym for an offense.
Misdeamor or felony.
It is a criminal offense.