Wednesday, 11 July 2012

Fake Drivers License, Disorderly Conduct



Michael Pellegrino, 18, of Oakdale, N.Y., was charged with tampering with public records at 1:34 a.m. on July 7. Princeton Borough police said he presented a fake New Jersey driver’s license to an Ivy Inn employee in an attempt purchase alcohol. He was released with a July 16 court date. Alex Nessas, 24, of Barclay Boulevard, Princeton, was charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest at 1:19 a.m. July 8. Police said he was seen stumbling and falling in the roadway on Spring Street. According to police, when an officer approached to assist Nessas he attempted to punch the officer and then physically resisted handcuffing. He was given a July 16 court date and released for medical treatment continue

If Chuck Berry was a Millennial, he would probably not be inspired to write the classic cruising song, “No Particular Place to Go.” Just as the economy is spinning its wheels, so, too, are young people in their teens and 20s idling in neutral when it comes to getting their driver’s licenses and buying new cars, according to a new study with implications not just for the auto industry but for the economy as a whole. The U.S. Census Bureau projects that Millennials over the age of 25 will comprise roughly 19% of the U.S. population by 2020, up from just over 5% in 2010. Unlike baby boomers, whose generation-defining car culture has been immortalized in such Top 40 hits as “Fun, Fun, Fun” and “Hot Rod Lincoln,” Millennials are taking a back seat when it comes displaying love or loyalty for automobiles, according to a recently released annual study by AlixPartners, a global business-advisory continue

Contrary to breathless media reports, there’s no reason to believe over 750,000 Pennsylvanians will be turned away from polling places in November as a result of new voter ID protections. Upon closer inspection, such reporting is much ado about nothing. If anything, it makes a stronger case for reforming the voting process to protect against identity fraud at the polls. What the Pennsylvania Departments of State and Transportation did was compare the registered voter list with the driver’s license list. It determined that there are over three-quarters of a million more people on the voter list. The headlines and lead paragraphs lead one to believe that each of the names on the list represents a legitimate Pennsylvania voter who is not going to be able to vote in November. Slate’s Dave Weigel called it “an apocalypse to watch out for.” A Philadelphia Inquirer report asserts the disparity indicates the new law is “putting … voting rights at continue

http://www.ezdrivingtest.com/blog/2012/07/11/fake-drivers-license-disorderly-conduct-11july2012/

1 comment:

  1. Making fake driving license is illegal but the perfect driver does not like to make face license. The person who want to make this,is trying avoid driving test and it is very dangerous in future.
    Roger

    ReplyDelete