No it must be covered by an insurance policy valid in the state of registration.
Wisconsin is bordered by Minnesota (MN) to the west, Iowa (IA) to the southwest, Illinois (IL) to the south and Michigan (MN) to the northeast. Madison is the capital city in Wisconsin.
MN= Minnesota, therfore yes it is a state.
Omaha, NE to the west, Pittsburgh, PA to the east, Nashville, TN to the south and Duluth, MN to the north.
St. Paul MN is on the east (north) side of the river, and Minneapolis is mostly on the west side. They are called the Twin Cities, but Minneapolis is larger.
Saint Paul is the capital city in the U.S. state of Minnesota. The city is on the east bank of the Mississippi River.
502 miles, using I-35 South.
around Cedar Rapids, IA
No. Each state has its own laws, and nothing can happen if you are in a different state.Another View: NOT EXACTLY. It depends on what type of offense you are wanted for and whether MN put the warrant into the interstate criminal computer system (NCIC) - and whether IA routinely runs your name through their state criminal computer when you apply for a license. If MN will extradite you back for prosecution, IA will hold you for them based on the interstate warrant.
Some major cities within a 5 hour driving range from Minneapolis, MN are: Des Moines, IA Milwakee, WI Cedar Rapids, IA Madison, WI
Yes they do. Law Enforcement have nation wide record abilities through NCIC. So they can see if you got a ticket in any other state too. Most of the time that won't count towards getting suspended in MN, but neighbor states such as WI, IA and ND will count just as if it were in MN.
It ia 337 miles according to Googke Maps/