In my experience, it depends on if the states have reciprocity with each other. Years ago I got a speeding ticket in Connecticut, but I was still officially living in Ohio. About a month later, I got a letter from the Ohio DMV saying that they were not going to assess any points on my license, because they had no reciprocity with CT. When I checked my driving record later, the ticket never showed up on my record.
Bottom line is: It will be reported to your home state, but it will depend on your home state to add it to your record.
2006-06-27 02:40:11
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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I don't think it will, but I'm not sure. In Illinois, where I live, if you get three speeding tickets in one year, you lose your license. However those only count towards tickets in Illinois. So, sometimes the states don't communicate. In the old days, the counties in a state wouldn't communicate. You could have multiple tickets in one county, and the next county would have no idea.
It depends on what you mean by record. If you apply for insurance, they will probably know about your ticket. If you are wondering if Missouri will know about your California ticket, there's a chance they might not.
In Illinois, they have a program where you pay $25 bucks, take an easy six hour class, and they erase up to one ticket a year. I would see if Cali has a program like that.
2006-06-27 02:40:16
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answer #2
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answered by Answer Schmancer 5
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Well, Yes it will. Just because you got a ticket in a different state doesn't mean it won't show up. Hopefully you know that every police station is connect by some way of communication.
2006-06-27 02:36:42
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answer #3
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answered by bebo 1
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Only if they run a Nation wide search, and usually they only do that for DOT drivers and auto insurance checks. But if you get stopped by a local or apply for a job that requires a driving record check, more than likely they will only check in the state you are in. Invest in a radar detector or be more observant to your surroundings. It's hard to drive in Cali if your not use to it.
2006-06-27 02:35:28
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answer #4
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answered by Krazy K 5
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Yes it will ! Call the traffic law center and pay an attorney to get it taken off of your record you may apy a little more but the points wont be assest towards you. Hope this helps
2006-06-27 02:30:05
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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yes unless you pay the ticket in under 30 days or go to court and win
2006-06-27 02:41:37
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answer #6
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answered by william R 3
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It will but the process may take longer than if you got a ticket in MO.
2006-06-27 02:34:03
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answer #7
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answered by Vulcan 1 5
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Yup it will, but if you take a Defensive Driving Course they should drop em, although I would call a DD course and get more info.
2006-06-27 02:34:22
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answer #8
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answered by Sweetdreamer 1
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many states have reciprocal agreements now due to the internet. There is a good chance that it will (Have you seen laptops in police cars?)
2006-06-27 02:34:30
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answer #9
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answered by helixburger 6
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Yep...sorry
2006-06-27 02:29:00
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answer #10
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answered by Rocky 3
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