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New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Hundreds Could Face Charges In State Driver's License 'Scrub'

Newark man and nearly 700 New Jersey residents could face criminal charges for obtaining New Jersey driver’s licenses using false identities.

Nearly 700 New Jersey residents could face criminal charges for obtaining New Jersey driver’s licenses using false identities, state officials announced Tuesday. Officials are touting the new high-tech facial recognition software, dubbed “Operation Facial Scrub,” to enforce the crackdown, Attorney General Jeffrey S. Chiesa and Motor Vehicle Commission Chairman and Chief Administrator Raymond P. Martinez said. The effort has resulted in more than 1,800 license suspensions thus far, officials said. More than 600 potential criminal cases have been referred to the attorney general’s office since the program began in December 2011. Of those cases, Chiesa announced the first wave of 38 criminal prosecutions today – including a Morristown …

Reality Chuck

10:24 pm on Sunday, February 17, 2013

Anyone who looks to the government for these broad based security solutions (remember it was terrorism that drove the 6 point ID process) should know that it only holds those with a sense of responsibility accountable. The same will happen with gun control. Someday a good citizen will be prosecuted for a crime where his/her gun was used to kill someone, and the scumbag theif will continue to walk…   more ›

Thursday, January 31, 2013

50 Porsches Among Sandy-Damaged Vehicles

NJ Motor Vehicle Commission, Division of Consumer Affairs launch database of vehicles damaged by the storm.

More than 50 Porsches, five Rolls Royces and three Ferraris are among the thousands of flood-damaged and salvaged vehicles collected in a new database in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy. The New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission and Division of Consumer Affairs has announced a partnership designed to help the public determine whether they are unknowingly purchasing a vehicle damaged by the storm. According to a release from the Attorney General's Office, there was a 6,000 percent spike in flood-damaged and salvage vehicle titles throughout the past three months, following the storm. According to state law, if a vehicle has suffered such damage that it is not practical to repair or it has been declared a loss by the insurer, the owner of …

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