The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although you forgot to attach the picture of the vehicles, we can say the following.
The two options you have in order to abide by the Move Over law is that as soon as you see the first response vehicle coming your way, you have to move. If you can't move over for whatever reason, or in the case you are driving on a two-lane road, you have to reduce your speed. The law indicates that your speed reduction must be 20 mph less than the official speed limit.
This way, first response vehicles such as ambulances, police cars, sanitation vehicles or wreckers, can pass through and get to the site as soon as possible to offer help.
Answer:
Explanation:
United States Supreme Court case which held that installing a Global Positioning System tracking device on a vehicle and using the device to monitor the vehicle's movements constitutes a search under the Fourth Amendment.
Answer:
"Opponents of the War Powers Resolution have traditionally claimed that clause 11 confers upon Congress only a narrow piece of war power. Defenders of the Resolution have argued in contrast that the Resolution constitutes an exercise of congressional authority under the clause. This last contention pokes at the truth without quite striking it. The War Powers Resolution is not constitutional as an exercise of the war power. It is constitutional because it defines the war power. The War Powers Resolution is nothing more or less than a congressional definition of the word "war" in article I. A definition of this kind coupled with a reasonable enforcement mechanism is well within the power of Congress under a proper understanding of the constitutional system of checks and balances. The definition does not intrude on any presidential prerogative. The mechanisms chosen by Congress to enforce the provisions of the Resolution were reasonable in 1973 and, although matters have been complicated by the United States Supreme Court's decision late last Term in Immigration and Naturalization Service v. Chadha, those mechanisms remain reasonable today."
Explanation:
Answer:
No.
Explanation:
Every one deserves an explanation. You can't give a answer without backup. It wouldn't be fair to the other and it can cause a whole controversy.