NO
No. There is a national database.
database that the National Security Agent on that movie
If the warrant was entered into your state and/or national criminal information database, yes, it should.
Probably. Most states report violations to the national database.
Nope. There is a national database that notifies other states of suspended licenses.
Yes ... all states may feed this information into a common National Database
The distinction between database schema and database state is very important. When we define a new database, we specify its database schema only to the DBMS. At this point, the corresponding database state is the empty state with no data. We get the initial state of the database when the database is first populated or loaded with the initial data. From then on, every time an update operation is applied to the database, we get another database state. At any point in time, the database has a current state. The DBMS is partly responsible for ensuring that every state of the database is a valid state-that is, a state that satisfies the structure and constraints specified in the schema. The DBMS stores the descriptions of the schema constructs and constraints-also called the meta-data-in the DBMS catalog so that DBMS software can refer to the schema whenever it needs to. The schema is sometimes called the intension, and a database state an extension of the schema.
The database state refers to the collection of data stored in the database at a specific point in time. It represents the current values of all data elements, tables, and relationships within the database. Changes to the database, such as insertions, updates, or deletions, can alter its state.
The database state refers to the current data stored in the database, including all records and their values. On the other hand, the database schema refers to the structure of the database, including tables, columns, constraints, and relationships. The schema defines how the data is organized and stored in the database.
Yes, they can pull your driving history from the state and your claims history from a national database.
We the People. lulz
IF your state requires registration, and most do not, then the state should have a database; however, that database is probably closed to the public.