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Lawsuit aims to end California license plate language limits

The DMV won't allow personaized license plates that 'may carry connotations offensive to good taste and decency.' That could change.

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California may have to end most restrictions on personalized license plate language that some might find offensive, if a lawsuit filed Tuesday prevails. 

The libertarian Pacific Legal Foundation lawsuit challenges the state Department of Motor Vehicles' current policy on free speech grounds. 

The department denied more than 30,000 of the nearly 250,000 applications submitted in 2018, the last year available, after deciding that the proposed language “may carry connotations offensive to good taste and decency," says the lawsuit filed in federal court in San Francisco. 

Find the details HERE.

MORE FROM THE DMV LINE:  Here's the thing — when you move to California and establish residency, you have 10 days to get a new driver license and 20 days to register your vehicle. Why Guy answers:  why are drivers allowed to have non-California license plates.

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