Habitual Traffic Offender
A Habitual Traffic Offender (HTO) isn’t just a label—it’s a serious designation applied when a motorist’s repeat, major violations or chronic moving offenses within a three- to seven-year period cross a dangerous thresho
Browsing 45 reports from this period
A Habitual Traffic Offender (HTO) isn’t just a label—it’s a serious designation applied when a motorist’s repeat, major violations or chronic moving offenses within a three- to seven-year period cross a dangerous thresho
The thunder of roaring engines, the high-pitched screech of tires, the streak of headlights bearing down—reckless driving isn’t just another traffic ticket. It’s a criminal offense, typically treated as a misdemeanor (an
Driving to Endanger—often called Reckless Driving or Reckless Endangerment—is one of the most serious traffic offenses in the U.S. This isn’t a parking ticket; it’s a criminal charge for choosing to wield a deadly weapon
Operating Under the Influence (OUI)—also known as Driving Under the Influence (DUI), Driving While Intoxicated (DWI) or Operating While Intoxicated (OWI)—is a criminal offense everywhere in the U.S., including Washington
• Fleeing an accident—commonly called a hit-and-run—is a criminal offense in every U.S. state. Penalties vary by jurisdiction and depend on whether only property was damaged or if someone was injured or killed. • Nationa
Enforcement Is State-by-State There’s no single federal “aggressive driving” law. Most states treat it as a series of traffic infractions, but a few label it a misdemeanor—and if someone is injured, it’s automatically el
· Driving when your license is suspended is treated as a criminal misdemeanor—not a mere traffic violation—and can carry up to 30 days ( or more) in jail, significant fines, an extended suspension period, and an SR-22 in
Accidents causing death or serious injury carry severe consequences nationwide, even though each state sets its own rules: • Criminal Classification – A routine traffic error—speeding, failing to yield—can become vehicul
Open container laws bar any unsealed alcoholic beverage from the passenger compartment of a motor vehicle on public roads. Thirty-nine states plus Washington, D.C. follow federal guidelines. Violations are almost always
Street racing is prosecuted harshly throughout the United States—usually under reckless‐ driving or specific “speed contest” laws. Although there’s no single federal statute ( each state writes its own traffic and crimin
Negligent vs. Reckless Driving - Negligent (Careless) Driving: A lapse in judgment or attention—failing to yield, texting behind the wheel, rolling stops. Often charged as a “lesser included” offense compared to reckless
Traffic citations aren’t just about speeding. In Las Vegas, where bumper-to-bumper traffic clogs the urban corridors, moving violations dominate the citation landscape. Meanwhile, Nevada’s vast desert highways tempt even