Of course not.
The Motor Vehicle Laws.
Get a copy of your motor vehicle report, or MVR, at the Department of Motor Vehicles of your state. They will charge you a nominal fee.
To check if your car has tickets, you can contact your local Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) or visit their website. You can also check with the local police department or parking enforcement agency for any outstanding tickets on your vehicle.
No they are not the same thing. careless operation is not as bad of a ticket.
No, not as long as their operation is non-discriminatopry and adheres to carefully established guidelines. They are a public safety operation, and allow law enforcement to examine the motor vehicle credentials of both the vehicle and operator, which every state's motor vehicle laws allow.
No.plane is not a motor vehicle.
Tickets are credited to your drivers licence, no to your motor vehicle registration. So, yes, changing your plates doesn't remove the points from your licence.
An airplane is a VEHICLE. It's power is provided by a MOTOR.
Insurance companies request an MVR or Motor vehicle record from the state in which you live. This reports your previous violations to the company.
Citations aren't issued to the vehicle but to the driver. So no records are usually kept on the driving history of a vehicle.You should be able to get a motor vehicle report from your local motor vehicle department up to the last 5 years.Another View: The above answer is true IF you are asking only about "moving" tickets.Moving violation tickets ARE issued to the operator individually, and not the vehicles license tag.HOWEVER - for non-moving violations (i.e.: parking tickets), you can follow the advice above and you may be able to get a print-out of the non-moving/parking violations issued to the license tag.
The definition of a motor vehicle motor vehicle. (Engineering / Automotive Engineering) a road vehicle driven by a motor or engine, esp an internal-combustion engine.
If the tickets were issued for state motor vehicle code violations (e.g.: speeding - reckless driving - DUI - etc - etc), yes, they do. However for municipal violations, (usually parking infractions, etc) no, they do not.