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Drunk Driving - If Your License is Taken From
You...
In Missouri every time you get a ticket for a moving violation you
accumulate points against your driver's license. The number of points
you can accumulate before you lose your license depends on the period
of time in which those points are accumulated.
The general rule in the state of Missouri is, if you get 8 points
in an 18 month period of time, you will lose your license. It is important
to note that you do not get your license back automatically; there
is something that you must do at the end of the suspension period
to get your license back for a loss of license points.
If you accumulate more points in a shorter period of time, 12 points
in a 12 month period, you will lose your license for an entire year.
In Kansas it is really much simpler: if you get three moving violations
in a 12-month period, you lose your license. If the points that cost
you your license were the result of a ticket you mailed in, an attorney
may be able to go back to the court where you mailed in your speeding
ticket and get that undone, undoing your suspension.
Another possibility is a hardship driver's license, which is discussed
in another section. If you get a DWI, you can lose your license in
a number of different ways. First of all you can lose your license
because you have a blood alcohol content in excess of .08 hundredths
per millionths in your blood. This is called administrative suspension.
If you get caught with a blood alcohol content of .08, the first time
you lose your license for 90 days and you can't drive at all within
the first 30 days. The first time you get an administrative suspension
in a five year period you lose your license for 90 days. You cannot
drive the first 30 days, but you can drive the last 60 days if you
file an SR22. If at the end of those 90 days you file an SR22 and
show completion of an alcohol education program you can get your license
back. You lose your license for one year for a 2nd time blood alcohol
over .10 within a five year period of the first one, and there is
no hardship license available in this case.
You also may lose your license if you get a Drunk Driving charge because
a Drunk Driving charge carries enough points to cause suspension by
itself. If you are involved in an accident and don't have the insurance
to pay for it, or do not repair the damages, you will lose your license.
Most of these suspensions will allow you to get a hardship license
at some point in time. You can also lose your license for refusing
to take a breathalyzer test. If you refuse to take a breathalyzer
you lose your license for a year, but you can get a hardship license
after 90 days. |