The Courthouse or Police Station.
On your citation there will a date in which the traffic school certificate is due to the court. Here a a quick and easy traffic school www.gototrafficschool.com www.getdefensive.com www.teendrivingcourse.com www.kissmyticket.com
Most insurance premiums will increase after recieveing a ticket. YOur best bet is to take defensive driving, even if you insurance premium doesn't go up from the ticket,you can send your agent your DD certificate and get a discount, it will go down for doing the defensive driving. I recommend you this site where you can compare quotes from different companies: mycheapinsurance.net
Yes
Since it is a moving violation, and your desire to have the points removed from your driving record, then traffic school is the way to go. Otherwise, that violation will stick on your permanent driving record for 39 months.
No. Your Driver's License record is running history of your driving history throughout your life and, unlike juvenile criminal offenses, does not "go away" after you turn 18.
A persons insurance could go up $5 to $25+ a month. It depends on the policyholders driving record and the details of the contract.
Installing heavy armor plating, advanced weapon systems, and defensive measures such as shields and countermeasures can turn a ship into a fortress to enhance its defensive capabilities against enemy attacks.
Yes. It depends though. Not all local authorities turn in 3111 violations as they are not required to send them to the state. And they don't want the state to know how many speeding tickets they turn into minor violations. If anything it might show up on your driving record IF EVEN sent but the insurance companies won't know about it unless they pull up your MVD.
turnover letter
What kind of "record" are you asking about. If it is your driving record - traffic offenses do not "go away" upon your turning 18. They are with you for life. It is only criminal offenses that are "shielded" after you turn 18. If it is a criminal record - go to the Clerk of The Court's Office and advise them that there is a juvenile criminal offense showing on your adult record.
it will stick with u Added: The first answer IS correct. Regardless of your age, your drivers record is a lifelong compilation of your driving history and it never 'goes away.
no, it's grammatically wrong