1. A pretrial limited driving privilege is a temporary court order, not a license restoration.
A pretrial limited driving privilege is a judicial order that authorizes restricted driving during a period when a driver’s license has been revoked in connection with an implied-consent impaired driving case. It does not restore a license, erase a revocation, or signal how the criminal charge will be handled. The underlying revocation remains in place, and the privilege operates as a narrow exception that permits specified driving activity under defined, limited conditions.
2. Pretrial privileges exist within the civil revocation framework, not the criminal case itself.
Courts evaluate pretrial limited driving privileges through the lens of civil license revocation law, not as part of sentencing or disposition of the underlying impaired driving charge. The statutory authority for limited privileges in North Carolina is tied to pretrial revocations arising from alleged implied-consent offenses, rather than to post-conviction consequences. This distinction matters because eligibility rules, waiting periods, and conditions differ from those that apply after a conviction.
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