Docket MX519138

MX519138 · FOR_HIRE · Active · issued to ELIO ARMANDO RAMIREZ GOMEZ

Operating authority docket MX519138 is the FMCSA motor-carrier authority record for ELIO ARMANDO RAMIREZ GOMEZ of TIJUANA, BN. This page shows the docket's for_hire authority — currently active — its complete action history with FMCSA, and a downloadable copy of the official MC certificate when one is on file. Use it to verify a carrier before partnering, before booking a load, or while auditing safety and insurance compliance.

MX519138 FOR_HIRE Active

What this status means

This docket holds active operating authority. The carrier is currently authorized by the FMCSA to operate in interstate commerce. Authority remains valid only while insurance (BMC-91 or BMC-91X) and BOC-3 process-agent filings are kept current — a lapse in either triggers automatic revocation.

Carrier

DBA: E&A RAMIREZ
USDOT 1349223 · TIJUANA, BN
Active

Related filings

Authority Records (1 row)

Docket Type Status Final Action
MX519138 FOR_HIRE Active Unknown

Operating Authority Certificate

No certificate on file

We don't have a local PDF of the operating authority certificate for this docket. Try the FMCSA Licensing & Insurance portal directly — search by docket number on the SAFER lookup.

Look up on FMCSA SAFER / L&I →

Event Summary (1 total event)

GRANTED 1

Action History Showing 1–1 of 1

Page 1 of 1
Date Action Authority Type Original
Mar 29, 2005 GRANTED FOR HIRE PROPERTY GRANTED

How to verify this operating authority

  1. Confirm the docket number. Check that the docket number on this page (MX519138) exactly matches the one on the carrier's invoice, contract, rate confirmation, or load-board listing. A mismatch is the most common red flag.
  2. Check the current status. Look at the status badge above. Active means the carrier may legally operate; Revoked means the carrier cannot operate in interstate commerce under this authority.
  3. Review the action history. Scan the Action History table for past revocations or reinstatement events. A pattern of repeat revocations usually reflects ongoing insurance instability.
  4. Cross-check live insurance with FMCSA. For the most current insurance and BOC-3 status, click through to the FMCSA SAFER / L&I lookup linked on this page. SAFER updates within 24 hours of insurer filings; TruckCodex mirrors it daily.

Frequently asked questions about MX519138

What is FMCSA docket MX519138?
Docket MX519138 is the FMCSA operating-authority record covering for_hire authority for ELIO ARMANDO RAMIREZ GOMEZ. Each docket is issued by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration's Office of Registration and stays attached to the carrier permanently — FMCSA does not reissue numbers to different companies.
Is MX519138 authority active?
Yes. MX519138 currently holds active operating authority with FMCSA. Active means the carrier may legally operate in interstate commerce under this authority, contingent on continuous insurance (BMC-91 or BMC-91X) and BOC-3 process-agent filings remaining on file.
How do I download the MC certificate for MX519138?
We don't currently mirror a PDF for MX519138. The official certificate, when one exists, is published by the FMCSA Licensing & Insurance (L&I) portal — search by docket number on SAFER. Newer dockets sometimes take 30–60 days to appear in the public L&I file after grant.
How do I verify a carrier's operating authority?
Three checks together give a complete picture: (1) confirm the docket number on this page matches the one on the carrier's documents, (2) check that status is Active and that no recent revocations appear in the Action History, and (3) cross-reference live insurance and BOC-3 filings on FMCSA's SAFER portal. Mismatches between a carrier's claimed MC number and the registered legal name are the single most common indicator of a problem.
What's the difference between Common, Contract, Passenger, and Freight Forwarder authority?
Common authority (type C) lets a carrier haul general freight for any shipper at published rates — the most flexible category. Contract authority (type B) limits the carrier to continuing contracts with a defined set of shippers. Passenger authority (type P) covers the transport of people. Freight Forwarder authority (type F) covers intermediaries who assemble and arrange shipments as the shipper of record. A single carrier may hold more than one type at once.
What insurance is required to keep this authority active?
For-hire motor carriers must keep continuous public-liability coverage on file with FMCSA — typically $750,000 minimum for general freight, $1,000,000 for hazmat or passenger operations, and up to $5,000,000 for certain hazmat classes. Cargo insurance (BMC-34) is required for household-goods movers. The carrier's insurer files Form BMC-91 or BMC-91X directly with FMCSA. A 30-day cancellation notice from the insurer triggers automatic revocation if not replaced.
Can MC authority be bought, sold, or transferred?
MC authority itself is non-transferable — FMCSA issues it to a specific legal entity and won't let the docket move to a different one. What gets bought and sold in practice is the operating company that holds the authority. Acquiring the entity (its corporate shell, EIN, USDOT, and MC docket together) lets the buyer operate under the existing dockets, but the transaction must be reported to FMCSA, which will re-verify safety fitness, insurance, and ownership before letting authority continue. "Authority for sale" listings that promise a fast standalone MC transfer are misleading at best.
What happens if this authority is revoked in the future?
If FMCSA revokes operating authority, the carrier loses the legal right to operate in interstate commerce under this docket. The docket stays attached to the carrier permanently and can be reinstated by curing the underlying issue — typically by filing a fresh BMC-91 insurance form and paying any outstanding fees. FMCSA does not transfer the docket to a different carrier or reissue the number.

About FMCSA operating authority

FMCSA operating authority — the MC, FF, or MX docket number — is the federal permit a for-hire motor carrier, freight forwarder, or broker needs to operate in interstate commerce. It is separate from the USDOT number, which every commercial vehicle operator (including private carriers) must hold. A carrier hauling its own goods needs only a USDOT number; a carrier hauling for hire needs both a USDOT number and an MC docket.

Each docket is issued to a specific legal entity and stays attached to that entity permanently. FMCSA does not reissue a revoked docket to a different carrier and does not allow direct transfer of authority between companies. Authority is granted only after the carrier files proof of insurance (Form BMC-91 or BMC-91X) and a BOC-3 process-agent designation; lapses in either trigger automatic revocation.

TruckCodex mirrors authority records and certificate PDFs directly from FMCSA's public Licensing & Insurance (L&I) and SAFER systems on a daily refresh cycle. We do not sell, transfer, or modify authority — every record on this page reflects what FMCSA has on file. For real-time confirmation immediately before a transaction, click through to the SAFER lookup linked above.

Data sources & freshness

TruckCodex aggregates official public-sector datasets. See the Source registry for dataset-level coverage and the Freshness log for last-import timestamps.

Census, SAFER, SMS, Licensing & Insurance (L&I), roadside inspections, crashes, and authority history.

Refreshed daily.

Vehicle recall campaigns, defect investigations, and consumer safety complaints (SCRS).

Refreshed daily.
EIA

Retail diesel and gasoline price history and state fuel-tax tables.

Refreshed weekly.

Cross-border carrier registry and Canadian recall campaigns where applicable.

Refreshed weekly.

TruckCodex is an independent aggregator; it is not affiliated with FMCSA, NHTSA, EIA, or Transport Canada. Always verify compliance-critical information directly with the originating agency.