Go the Clerk of the Court of the county you received your DUI. This is all public record and have them or you can use their computers and run your name. If it appears then you will have to do the following.... In the county I live in your DUI record will remain part of the courts records. You will have to go to the Clerk of the Court and Motion for Expungement asking to expungement the court record and the police record - the department where the report was taken. Once granted, follow through with taking the signed court order to the police department. What this means is that if anyone runs your record it will not appear anymore. The courts require some valid reason you don't want it on there anymore. i.e., applying for jobs that require your driving skills and the DUI showing up will hinder your chances of employment. Hope this helps you.
i dont think so
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No, but they CAN be appealed to the State Court of Appeals.
The Supreme Court is the most powerful federal court. The Courts of Appeal are the most powerful courts most litigants will ever reach (the Supreme Court only hears a tiny number of cases a year). The District Courts are the trial level courts.
"Charlie X" , the titular character did this in response to his dislike of others laughing at him .
After it goes through all the lower courts and federal courts, the supreme court gets it. for novanet its judicial
India moves slowly, Madagascar is even slower, but even that's not the slowest thing ever.
Dictators can do what ever they want while kings have a counsel to make laws and they use the courts.
You don't. Never use even when. Ever.
Technically, the courts do not make laws (in the United States), although they do establish something called common law when ever a judge publishes a decision. Every time a judge publishes an opinion he or she is setting a precedent that other judges within the same jurisdiction will be expected to follow (though there is no requirement that is be followed unless a higher court has established a ruling and even then, on occasion, the lower courts will still present a different ruling) but the actual creation of law is left to legislative bodies of the various states and Congress.
You can sue anyone. The court may or may not agree with you and you may or may not be able to EVER collect, even if you win. In legal terms, "Sue", just means to ask. When you "sue" someone, you are just asking the courts to force someone to pay you. If the individual is in England the courts may decide that there is no way they could enforce anything they decide.
No.