yes
If you are charged with a hit and run, you will lost your license and have it suspended. There will be other consequences as well such as jail and fines.
Legally no. However if he or she was charged with an offence the judge would take into account the circumstances.
If your driving privileges had been suspended in FL it is surprising that you managed to get a NC license. HOWEVER, since you managed to get one, if you are stopped in FL you will still be charged with a violation, regardless of whether or not you have a valid NC license.
You will be charged with driving while your license is suspended. Whether or not you're on probation doesn't effect this particular offense. If you were on probation, driving with a suspended license is probably a violation of your probation, and a whole different issue.
Although both Kid Rock and Tommy Lee were both expelled from the 2007 MTV Video Music Awards for an altercation, only Kid Rock was charged with assault (for punching Lee). He pled guilty, was given a suspended sentence, and paid a fine.
The reason you are pulled over does not matter. If you have a suspended license, you can be charged.
The positively charged object will be attracted towards the negatively charged object due to the electrostatic force between opposite charges. The suspended object may move closer to or even touch the negatively charged object, depending on the strength of the charges and the distance between them.
Yes, as well as be charged criminally.
If you are charged with a hit and run, you will lost your license and have it suspended. There will be other consequences as well such as jail and fines.
It is against the law everywhere to block a driveway, and if you were somehow at fault for your trailer being struck, yes. If you were obstructing the driveway with the trailer and it was hit as someone attempted to exit the drive, BOTH you and the other driver could be charged.
NO! You may only be ticketed for operating a motor vehicle on public roadways. Well... assuming you weren't recklessly endangering anyone... If you only operate OFF of public roads, you do not need a license, insurance, or a tag.
A suspended imposition IS a sentence. It means you were found guilty of whatever it is you were charged with but the judge suspended imposition of the penalty. It is now part of your criminal history and doesn't "go away."
You have already been charged. There is no statute of limitation.
It will move away
Apparently you can get charged or suspended if you threaten a teacher via facebook status. If it is reported to the school, it could possibly hold some concequenses (depending on the severity of the threat, of course).
If you're driving on the road - yes.
Yes. Violating your probation is probably a separate charge.