No. That is part of the FCC rules with regards to the VEC and VE system.
No. You will have to resolve the suspension issues in IL before you can apply for a license in ANY state. On the application you would fill out in GA are the questions asking if you have ever had a license in another state & has that license ever been suspended/revoked. If you answer truthfully, you will be automatically denied. If you lie & say no to both questions, you have committed a criminal offense & could go to jail for fraud, falsifying a legal document or other charges. Regardless of how you answer those questions, GA will run a license history on you to see if you have had a license before & the status.
*Suspended means not aloud to drive on your licence for a certain reason until that reason is fixed (ex.unpaid tickets) or until the date that you were legally given. You technically still obtain a licence it is just suspended. *Revoked is having no licence whatso ever for a certain amount of time due to criminal charges or infractions against you. Being revoked you have no licence at all.
No, if your license is revoked, it is permanently canceled and you cannot legally get a new license until you fulfill the legal requirements to be reinstated.
I take it your license has been suspended in Florida. I would say if you had your license suspened for what ever reason, even if you could get one in LA, it's only a matter of time before it happens again.
Have you ever heard the phrase "ignorance of the law is no excuse"? It doesn't matter if you knew or not. It's illegal to drive with a suspended license, and if you're doing so, you can be charged with that crime. Legitimately not knowing might be a defense in court, but you'd probably have to prove that you didn't know, since usually having your license suspended doesn't occur until after you've done something that you should reasonably suspect your license would be suspended for.
He was arrested in New York City in July 2011 for driving with a suspended license.
An adminstrative assistant in a large clinic must write a letter to another state to determine whether a physician whom the clinic wants to hire has ever had his license revoked. This action is part of a process called?
Yes. She got arrested on December 9th for a suspended license and going over the speed limit.
Go onto your state's Department of Public Health website. Usually here is a search engine enabling you to search any health professional to see if they have an active current license and if they've ever had their license revoked.
A volunteer examiner must be at least 18 years of age. Part 97.509 section b states the following: (b) Each administering VE must: (1) Be accredited by the coordinating VEC; (2) Be at least 18 years of age; (3) Be a person who holds an amateur operator license of the class specified below: (i) Amateur Extra, Advanced, or General Class in order to administer a Technician Class operator license examination; (ii) Amateur Extra or Advanced Class in order to administer a General Class operator license examination. (iii) Amateur Extra Class in order to administer an Amateur Extra Class operator license examination. (4) Not be a person whose grant of an amateur station license or amateur operator license has ever been revoked or suspended.
No, you cannot, under Article IV Section I of the US Constitution is the Full Faith and Credit clause. Each state must respect the judicial precedings of each other state. If you're suspended in one state, you're suspended in all.
Probably not. Most states computers talk to each other. There is also something called an interstate "compact" which allows states to share information about reckless and impaired drivers, preventing them from just going to another state for a license. If you misrepresent yourself to get another license, and the state ever finds out about it, you could be arrested for fraud as well as facing the other issues that originally suspended your license. It can get ugly.