Does this license plate mean what I think it does?

It means at least 7 other people have a BEKKK license plate.

Except that the Odd Fellows aren’t Masonic. They have no relationship and are separate, distinct fraternal groups.

I did a google image search of BEKKK and there was an image like one of those “keep calm” posters that said
“Keep BEKKK with Faliq Noise of Korban”

So you believe the state asked BEKKK 8 for an explanation and was satisfied that it wasn’t a reference to the Klan?

When I lived in Maryland I had at least two personalized plates, and no explanation was ever requested. (They weren’t anything controversial, however.)

I know that states can deny tags on the basis of obscenity and offensiveness, and have heard about disputes over those issues. I seem to recall hearing of a case where “4 Nick 8” was denied, even though the applicant claimed the car was an 8-cylinder model that was a gift for someone named Nick.

But would some states consider any combination with KKK in it offensive and disallow it? Clearly this state didn’t.

My SIL got a random plate which had PMS and 3 numbers. She didn’t like it and threw a fit til they jumped her up to the next random series. So the DMV ain’t always on top of connotations of combos of letters.

They’re not completely clueless. I’m pretty sure they don’t issue tags with combinations like ASS or FUK or KOK.

It’s probably just that in cases like PMS they don’t want to pre-emptively eliminate 1,000 possible plates on the chance that people like your SIL won’t like them. I imagine most people offered PMS didn’t know or didn’t care about that implication. Or even liked it!

At least in the states I’ve lived in, there’s a known fixed maximum number of characters. 6, 7, or 8 being common. Some states allow one embedded half-space that doesn’t count as a character.

IME they count full spaces as characters, but two plates can’t differ only by placement of spaces. So someone getting “B EKKK8” will prevent anyone from getting “BE KKK 8”, “BEK KK8”, etc. Because with the spaces crushed out, they all collapse to “BEKKK8”

IME in several states they don’t ask up front. They reserve the right to demand an explanation (which they may not approve of) but unless the plate trips some screen of theirs, or they get complaints from other drivers, no explanation is necessary.

I’ve told this story before, but my Mom was a court reporter back in the day when they used those manual stenotype machines Stenotype - Wikipedia. The output is phonetic shorthand that’s completely illegible to the uninitiated.

When California came out with personalized plates in the 1970s, another reporter in her office immediately applied for, and got, a plate that read the steno equivalent of “FUCK YOU”. To the rest of us it looked like a cat walked on the keyboard.

He had that plate for years. :smiley:

OTOH, there’s a story of a young guy who ordered & received the plate “GOT MILF”. He had it for a couple years before it’d accumulated enough complaints for DMV to investigate. He came back with some story about being head of an organization whose initials were “MILF”. They bought it for awhile as the complaints continued. He eventually got in minor legal trouble for falsifying a public record by lying to the bureaucrat in writing about what MILF meant. They took his plate for good. :mad:

This.

My wife once got issued an ordinary plate that included “HA8”. The other chunk of letters/numbers were useless; we couldn’t come up with an interpretation that was either funny or obnoxious. She was not happy about dragging “HATE” wherever she went, but wasn’t annoyed enough to do anything about it. DMV couldn’t care less that they made 2600 folks (1 letter + 2 digits) drive around advertising for hate.

We have someone local who has a custom plate with “5” and “HIT”. They got away with “5HIT”. I see them about once a month with their innocuous Camry.

Here’s one CA DMV missed: I saw this with my own rear-view mirror (hint, hint):

3M TA3

In Virginia, at least, even hyphens don’t make a plate different enough from a non-hyphen version. For example, IH8-I66 is the ‘same’ as IH8I66 and I H8 I66 and IH8 I66 so if the first one is gone, by default, so are the rest.

Note: the above example is not my license plate, but one I’ve seen locally. And anyone from the DC metro area will understand why and how that is a true statement for anyone who has ever driven on I66 anytime between 5am and 10pm.

K-K-K-Katie,
Beautiful Katie,
You’re the only g-g-g-girl that I adore.
When the m-moon shines,
Over the cow shed,
I’ll be waiting at the k-k-k-kitchen door.

Back in the k-k-k-eighties I knew a woman named Kate whose license plate was indeed KKKKATY. (Possibly …KATIE, not positive after all these years.) I rather doubt NY state would permit that today.

As has been mentioned there are other referents for KKK. I read a mystery story once in which a baseball scoreboard operator was killed following a game, but left a dying message on the scoreboard: KKK. The investigation looked first for Klansmen at the stadium but soon realized the message referred to the home team’s closer, who had struck out all three batters in the ninth to end the game.

My daughter had a neighbor-friend named Katie. When they were 7-ish I came home from a work xmas party a little tipsy. Katie and my daughter were watching Barney tapes. I gave my daughter a hug, then joyously sang the K-K-K Katie song to the girls. Tipsy? I was drunk.

Then I went to check on dinner. From the kitchen I overheard my kid telling her friend that I was an amazing singer, and I wrote songs all the time. Katie was in awe. I never corrected their misunderstanding.
(I did occasionally make up simple songs, inserting their names into preexisting lullabys and such, but I was born lacking any real talent.)