No More Driver’s License Revocation for Drug Convictions in Virginia
August 1, 2020 by Jean Humbrecht
There have been a number of changes to criminal laws in Virginia in 2020. One such change is that Virginia removed the requirement of driver’s license revocation for drug convictions. Read the post below for more information on Virginia no longer revoking driver’s licenses after drug convictions.
For more information on driver’s license revocation in Virginia, click here.
No More Driver’s License Revocation for Drug Convictions in Virginia
Virginia removed the requirement of driver’s license revocation after a drug conviction in July 2020. Previously, anyone convicted of nearly any drug offense would also have his or her driver’s license automatically revoked for 6 months as a result of a conviction. This even applied to deferred adjudications of guilt available to first time offenders that resulted in charges being dismissed.
While this is a big step in helping many people keep their driver’s licenses, there still are a number of other reasons that a person’s driver’s license can be revoked in Virginia, including convictions for various offenses committed while operating a motor vehicle (such as DUI convictions, felony convictions involving the use of a motor vehicle, and a third conviction resulting in demerit points committed by a person when he or she was under 18), taking a driver’s test for another person, or providing false information to obtain a driver’s license.
For more information on reasons a driver’s license could be revoked in Virginia, click here.
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