If they are doing their job, yes.
yes
Generally not. As long as you had a valid drivers license you really should not have gotten a ticket in the first place but we will assume that in your city, town, or county it is a violation not to have your drivers license in your possession. If this is the case most insurance companies only rate for moving violations and do not count procedure violations such as this.
You will be punished for the violations that you have for driving with a suspended license and for driving without insurance. These punishments will be severe but vary from state to state. The violations on your part will not effect the fault of the accident and if the other party is truly at fault then their insurance company will pay for your damages incurred in the accident.
Typically you don't need insurance in order to have a driver's license. If however you have violations on your driving record and are required to have an insurance policy in order to keep you license you should have no problem getting a non-owners policy.
Parking tickets do not affect your insurance rates, only moving violations or other tickets that take points off your license.
It is not possible to put a lien on a person's driver's license in any state. A driver's license can be suspended or revoked but only for traffic violations.
Minor driving violations will no longer be counted for insurance purposes after three years. In states that assign points for the privilege of keeping a license,the violations will drop off after three years of a clean record. The violations can still be seen in a record check.
If you are driving under the influence, if you've been convicted of drug offenses, driving without insurance, and excessive moving violations are some of the ways to suspend a license in Houston.
Yes.
The cost of a Viatical Settlement Provider License in IL, as of February 2010, is $3,000 however; you must first obtain a life insurance license from the state of Illinois. If Illinois in not your resident state, you must hold a life insurance license in your resident state before applying for a nonresident life insurance license in Illinois.
You will get a ticket for these violations but if you bring them with you to court and they show that you were licensed and insured on the date of the accident, these charges will be dismissed.
For insurance purposes, three years. Convictions for traffic violations remain on your MVR for seven years.