I'm not sure about in Warren County, but my girlfriend (who has had a total of 32 traffic tickets/violations in a year and a half) got Aggravated Unlicensed (5th occurance), Switched plates, no insurance, no registration, no more than 1 tag, license plate light out and obstruction of view in Onondaga County and she got a couple hundred dollars in fines and got her license back as soon as she paid them.
I however, got aggravated unlicensed (1st occurance), driving out of class and obstruction of view, in the same county with a different judge, and I wasnt able to get my license back for 3 years.
You need a good lawyer and pray that you have a nice judge.
Your driver's license will not be suspended in Pennsylvania if you have a suspended registration. A driver's license can be suspended for driving without insurance or if you get a DUI.
The law differs with each state in the United States in regards to suspended registration plates. In some states a fine is imposed, and in others the persons insurance and registration will not be renewed and the license will be suspended.
No, although your vehicle registration will be voided and you'll be required to turn in your plates.
Yes, You can still get auto Insurance on your own.. It is common for people to exclude an unlicensed spouse from from coverage on their Auto insurance Policy. This way you don't get penalized for your spouses driving record.
In California, the law is, if you in fact have an accident in California without insurance, and the dmv finds out about it, your license will be suspended for 1 year.
Yes.
Yes.
With a suspended insurance license, I would not because you will be breaking a law. With a suspended drivers license you can sell insurance.
Very simple, verify that the VIN that your insurance company has for the vehicle matches the VIN on the registration, then contact your agent or company and have them fax an ID Card (not a declarations page) to the DMV Financial Responsibility error.
Copy of registration for Occupy - We the People - 2012 SUSPENDED was released on: USA: April 2012
If I remember correctly, most if not all states require some form of insurance. In most cases only liability is required to satisfy the minimum financial responsibility requirement for a state. The consequences of driving without insurance can be severe. In some states if you are pulled over or have an accident (at fault or not), you can have your license suspensed/revoked, your vehicle registration suspended (you wouldn't be able to renew your tags), among other possible punishments.
suspended license