Articles Posted in health professional license

The Michigan DUI guilty plea consequences can reach far beyond the sentence imposed in court. A guilty plea may affect your driver’s license, professional standing, employment, travel, insurance, family life, and future opportunities long after the criminal case is over.

That is why one of the most important parts of DUI defense is not just evaluating whether the prosecutor can prove the charge. It is identifying what the plea will trigger outside the courtroom. For some clients, those collateral consequences are more damaging than the sentence itself.

A Guilty Plea Does More Than End the Criminal Case

Michigan licensed healthcare professionals are required to self-report any criminal conviction to LARA within thirty days of the date of conviction. Failure to self-report is not simply an oversight that can be corrected later. It is an independent licensing violation carrying its own sanctions, separate from and in addition to whatever discipline the underlying conviction itself produces.

When Must a Michigan Health Professional Report a Criminal Conviction?

In a criminal case, a conviction occurs when a person accused of a crime pleads guilty or is found guilty by a judge or jury at trial. This is the conviction date even if sentencing takes place days, weeks, or months later. The clock starts ticking as soon as the court acknowledges the conviction in a written order or judgment.

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