Can police prosecute if when stopped in car, car insured and person driving has authority by the driver?
Answers:
English, motherfucker! Do you speak it? - Jules (Pulp Fiction)
not that i am aware of but the driver has to confirm that the person driving the car has been given authorization to drive.
The police don't actually prosecute; the state does. That aside, you can be charged and it would be up to you to prove your case in court.
that depends, why was the person stopped in the first place? by the way police dont prosecute, they arrest.
as long as you can prove this no your ok
regards x kitti x
Can you rephrase the question to be more specific, and give more details please. Did the driver have a valid license, what did the person get charged with, etc...
To my knowledge, the police do not prosecute anything. The DA generally prosecutes people on behalf of the state.
Is the person authorized to drive the car have a valid DL (Driver's License??). And also prosecuted for what offense? You need to be more specific in your question. If the authorized person driving has a suspended DL, then of course he would get in trouble-both the driver and the passenger.
cars are not insured, people are insured to drive them, if you cannot produce an insurance certificate with your name on it then even with the owners consent you are looking at minimum of 6 points on your licence
Are you insured to drive the car?
You dont give much info but if you have a valid driving licence,if the car is insured fully comprehensive and taxed and you were not commiting a driving offence then you should not be prosecuted.For the uninformed if the person who owns the car is insured fully comp then he can allow a person to drive his car as long as the person has a valid licence but is only covered by third party insurance.
I think you need to re phrase this - the person driving as the authority of the driver?Even if you mean authority of the owner there is no offence mentioned.If the driver had no licence than the insurance is void and both the owner and driver commit offences and would be prosecuted.
The answers post by the user, for information only, FreeLawAnswer.com does not guarantee the right.
Answer question:
More Law Questions and Answers:
