no, if you are revoked in one state you may not get an operators license in another.
if you do you will eventually be caught and face criminal prosecution. the states have
all signed what is known as The Interstate Compact Agreement. this allows for the
suspension of an operators license in NJ for not paying a traffic fine for speeding in
the state of South Carolina. The agreement also covers revoked operators licenses.
The only way around this is to get your new license before the Indiana court enters the suspension order.
All states are members except for Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin, Tennessee (dropped out in 1997). Nevada repealed the authorizing legislation in 2007[1], though it still generally conforms to the agreement through regulations.
No
Not legally.
Wait for the Ohio suspension period to expire.
Not while the suspension is ongoing
You are only allowed to have a license from one state at a time. And you Ohio license is valid, even though suspended.
Yes, if the infraction happened inside the state lines. however, they won't suspend the license themselves, but will request Ohio to suspend it.
If you have legally moved to Ohio, you can take your Illinois licence and get an Ohio license.
There is a fee penalty but nothing else. They will allow you to change your license when you get around to it.
To change your Pennsylvania license back to an Ohio drivers license, you must first reside in Ohio. Visit any Bureau of Motor Vehicles to begin that process.
Please contact the local DMV in Illinois who can help you out.
Ohio. The points are by the state of the license by their standards. The only think Indiana will do is charge the fine. They cant give points or suspend a license they did not issue.
As long as you obtain a license in the state of Ohio before your you get suspended in Florida you license will still by valid. If you wait until after your license in suspended then Ohio will not issue you one. So, if you know your going to lose your license get on an airplane fly to Ohio get a license and you'll be fine. Its kinda of like the grandfather rule. Got to like the loop-hole system:-)