- (a) Upon written notification from a jurisdiction that is a party to an agreement entered into under this chapter, the bureau shall take appropriate action against a licensed driver for failure to meet the conditions set out in the citation of the jurisdiction in which the traffic offense occurred.
- (b) The bureau shall notify the driver by first class mail, or electronically if the driver has indicated a preference for receiving requests from the bureau electronically, of the request by the respective jurisdiction to have the driver's driving privileges suspended. For the purposes of this chapter, a written notice sent to the driver's last registered address with the bureau meets the conditions of due notice.
- (c) The driver has fifteen (15) days from the date of notice to satisfy the conditions of the citation issued by the jurisdiction or to request a hearing before a bureau hearing officer to show evidence or present information why the bureau should not suspend the driver's driving privileges for failure to meet the terms of the citation.
- (d) Upon holding the hearing, the bureau may suspend the driver's driving privileges until the conditions of the citation are met or a release from the citing jurisdiction is obtained.
- (e) If the bureau does not receive information from the driver concerning the notification, the bureau shall suspend the driver's driving privileges until the conditions of the citation are met or a release is obtained.
- (f) A driver whose driving privileges have been suspended for failure to meet the conditions of a citation in another jurisdiction is not eligible for specialized driving privileges under IC 9-30-16 .
(g) The bureau may not suspend driving privileges under this section for a nonmoving traffic offense occurring in another jurisdiction.
[Pre-1991 Recodification Citation: 9-5-1.1-4.]
As added by P.L.2-1991, SEC.16. Amended by P.L.125-2012, SEC.306; P.L.217-2014, SEC.116; P.L.188-2015, SEC.103; P.L.141-2024, SEC.42.