Reader’s Question:

If my drivers license was suspended for two DUIs in the state of Michigan can I obtain a drivers license in LA California?

Dan

Los Angeles, CA

although the state of Michigan is not a member of the DLC your suspended license will be listed in the National Driver Register (NDR) which Los Angeles California will verify before allowing you to get a license in CA.

The Drivers License Compact (DLC) is a reciprocal agreement that many states within the US are members of and requires the member states to forward the licensing state of a driver when he or she is convicted of a certain traffic violation. The licensing state then can know if the violation is put on the individual’s driving record, if points are applied, etc. The National Drivers Register is used by all US states, so both California and Michigan do have access to it.

When applying for a driver’s license in Los Angeles California the California DMV will verify the NDR. This database will then notify the Department of Motor Vehicle to any action against your driver’s license in other state(s). Once they aware that your drivers license is revoked in MI due to the two DUIs you will be unable to receive a CA driver’s license. To obtain a license in California you will first need to take care of your suspension or revocation in Michigan. If you are able to have your drivers license reinstated in MI then CA should be able to see this on your NDR listing and grant you a drivers license.

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Everything in California is expensive, so a San Diego CA DUI attorney can often make you faint just by pulling out the fee agreement. You could buy a house with that kind of money, you might think, and then resign yourself to being convicted to the full extent of the law because you’ll be representing yourself. Stop thinking that way. Federal requirements for representation apply for DUIs as well, and so if you have a felony, and even a lot of the time if you just have a misdemeanor, conviction that you are up against you will be provided with a lawyer by the state.

Lawyers who work for the state are typically seen as no nothings, and while I’m not going to deny that this term describes very well many public lawyers, it goes the same for private lawyers. Some public lawyers are bad at what they do, as are some private lawyers. The vast majority of public lawyers, though, excel.

Since being a public lawyer isn’t exactly going to get you as much money as being a private lawyer does, most such lawyers practice law for pay on the side, and often they retired into the public system after years of practicing law on their own.

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