How Should Cheating in Driving Tests Be Handled?
1 Answers
Cheating in driving license tests will result in a 3-year ban from applying for a driving permit. If an applicant is found to have engaged in bribery or cheating during the examination process, their qualification for the test will be revoked, and any other subjects they have already passed will be invalidated. The applicant will also be prohibited from applying for a motor vehicle driver's license again within one year. If an applicant obtains a motor vehicle driver's license through fraudulent means such as deception or bribery, the traffic management department of the public security authority will confiscate the driver's license and revoke the driving permit. The applicant will be barred from applying for a motor vehicle driver's license again within three years. Driving training institutions and their instructors found to have reduced training hours, cut training programs, bribed examiners, solicited money or valuables from students under the pretext of guaranteeing test success, or participated in illegal processing of driver's licenses or cheating in exams should be reported to the training supervision department and publicly disclosed. Cheating in driving tests is suspected of constituting the crime of organizing cheating, as "driving tests" fall under the category of "national examinations" as defined in Article 241-1 of the Criminal Law. In national examinations prescribed by law, those who organize cheating shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not more than three years or criminal detention, and/or be fined; if the circumstances are serious, they shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not less than three years but not more than seven years and also be fined.