Originally posted by: Svnla
Cop pulled me over around midnight (I was just got out from the library). He said I was speeding. I asked for proof such as radar reading but he if I didn't sign the ticket I would go to jail.
I signed the ticket then when to court and asked for traffic school. Four hours and some cash for traffic school, I was able to avoid some points on my DMV and surchages on my insurance.
The moral of the story is if the cop says you are speeding and he doesn't want to show you, nothing you can do about it but to give him DD/registration and sign the ticket. Just don't get smart and make him even more mad.
Signing a ticket is not an admission of guilt. The signature is merely an acknowledgement you received the ticket and a promise to appear in court.
Refusing to sign the ticket -- and there are drivers who think that if they don't sign, they can lie in court and say they weren't there -- will do nothing but agitate the officer and invite more scrutiny.
In some states, such as Texas, refusal to sign a ticket can mean a trip to jail. Houston attorney Robert Eutsler says that if you don't sign the ticket, the officer has the choice to either take you to jail or write on the ticket "refused to sign."
"It's a promise to appear in court on a certain day -- that's all it is,'' says Eutsler. "It's certainly a myth that if you don't sign it, it's going to get dismissed. You're more likely to get arrested, and the officer is going to get very upset."
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: Svnla
Cop pulled me over around midnight (I was just got out from the library). He said I was speeding. I asked for proof such as radar reading but he if I didn't sign the ticket I would go to jail.
I signed the ticket then when to court and asked for traffic school. Four hours and some cash for traffic school, I was able to avoid some points on my DMV and surchages on my insurance.
The moral of the story is if the cop says you are speeding and he doesn't want to show you, nothing you can do about it but to give him DD/registration and sign the ticket. Just don't get smart and make him even more mad.
::sighs::
SIGNING A TICKET IS NOT AN ADMISSION OF GUILT.
Signing a ticket is not an admission of guilt. The signature is merely an acknowledgement you received the ticket and a promise to appear in court.
Refusing to sign the ticket -- and there are drivers who think that if they don't sign, they can lie in court and say they weren't there -- will do nothing but agitate the officer and invite more scrutiny.
In some states, such as Texas, refusal to sign a ticket can mean a trip to jail. Houston attorney Robert Eutsler says that if you don't sign the ticket, the officer has the choice to either take you to jail or write on the ticket "refused to sign."
"It's a promise to appear in court on a certain day -- that's all it is,'' says Eutsler. "It's certainly a myth that if you don't sign it, it's going to get dismissed. You're more likely to get arrested, and the officer is going to get very upset."
http://articles.moneycentral.m...icketMyths.aspx?page=2
And as for showing proof? That's what court is for.
Originally posted by: Svnla
Hummm...show me where did I say in my post sign the ticket is admission of guilt? All I said was if the cop said you were speeding, all you could do was to sign the ticket to promise that you would go to court (IRRC, the ticket said so in the bottom or back).
You said go to court and ask for proof? Like the judge going to believe a motorist over the cop. In any other areas, you are innocent until proven guitly. Not in traffic tickets.
so I pretty much went with you not wanting to sign the ticket unless you were shown proof of your infraction. The most common reasoning with not wanting to sign is that it's an admission of guilt.I asked for proof such as radar reading but he if I didn't sign the ticket I would go to jail.
Originally posted by: BigJ
Originally posted by: Svnla
Hummm...show me where did I say in my post sign the ticket is admission of guilt? All I said was if the cop said you were speeding, all you could do was to sign the ticket to promise that you would go to court (IRRC, the ticket said so in the bottom or back).
You said go to court and ask for proof? Like the judge going to believe a motorist over the cop. In any other areas, you are innocent until proven guitly. Not in traffic tickets.
I really didn't know what the hell to make out of this
so I pretty much went with you not wanting to sign the ticket unless you were shown proof of your infraction. The most common reasoning with not wanting to sign is that it's an admission of guilt.I asked for proof such as radar reading but he if I didn't sign the ticket I would go to jail.
And yes, when you go to traffic court, the proof is provided to the court. With every other crime, does the officer show you proof then and there? When a murder suspect gets arrested and charged, do they show them the bloody glove when they're slapping the cuffs on, or to the attorney when preparing for the defense and in court?
Originally posted by: MikeyIs4Dcats
you aren't really that dumb are you?
Some states have laws providing that points are not assessed for minor speeding. On freeways in the daytime the tolerance is 5 MPH in Colorado, Florida, Michigan, Missouri, Pennsylvania, New Mexico, North Dakota, and Wyoming; 10 MPH in Kansas, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Montana, and West Virginia; and 15 MPH in Georgia. South Dakota doesn't assess points for speeding.
Originally posted by: Svnla
I don't know about you but some of us just can't take a day off and go to traffic court to fight it. Don't forget about court cost, insurance surgcharges and so on if you lose.
I, along with several posters in this thread, say that traffic cops have too much power to say that we were speeding.
Let just agree to disagree, ok?
Originally posted by: Aikouka
Originally posted by: MikeyIs4Dcats
you aren't really that dumb are you?
Some states have laws providing that points are not assessed for minor speeding. On freeways in the daytime the tolerance is 5 MPH in Colorado, Florida, Michigan, Missouri, Pennsylvania, New Mexico, North Dakota, and Wyoming; 10 MPH in Kansas, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Montana, and West Virginia; and 15 MPH in Georgia. South Dakota doesn't assess points for speeding.
http://www.mit.edu/~jfc/laws.html#tolerance
Kthxbai
Originally posted by: buzzsaw13
Your brother's word against the cop unless you have some solid proof you weren't going 80mph, and that usually ends up in the cop's favor.
Originally posted by: moshquerade
Do you know how fast you were going back there?
Umm... 65?
63.
But... isn't the speed limit 65?
Yeah. It is.
I'm freakin' out, man!
Originally posted by: BigJ
I would try to find another website to back up Aikouka's claim:
Originally posted by: BigJ
Some states have laws providing that points are not assessed for minor speeding
Originally posted by: BigJ
Except in a work zone or school zone Pennsylvania doesn't allow radar or laser tickets for less than 6 over the limit (or less than 11 over a limit less than 55 MPH), and only State Police can use radar or laser. Except by the State Patrol, radar and VASCAR can't be used in Georgia to write a ticket for 10 or less over the limit outside a residential area or school zone.
It only lists special cases.
Originally posted by: JS80
Originally posted by: moshquerade
Do you know how fast you were going back there?
Umm... 65?
63.
But... isn't the speed limit 65?
Yeah. It is.
I'm freakin' out, man!
omg i saw that movie last night!! haha
Originally posted by: Aikouka
Originally posted by: MikeyIs4Dcats
you aren't really that dumb are you?
Some states have laws providing that points are not assessed for minor speeding. On freeways in the daytime the tolerance is 5 MPH in Colorado, Florida, Michigan, Missouri, Pennsylvania, New Mexico, North Dakota, and Wyoming; 10 MPH in Kansas, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Montana, and West Virginia; and 15 MPH in Georgia. South Dakota doesn't assess points for speeding.
http://www.mit.edu/~jfc/laws.html#tolerance
Kthxbai
Originally posted by: MikeyIs4Dcats
Originally posted by: Aikouka
Originally posted by: mugs
He admitted to speeding, so good luck with that. I don't think you or your brother understand that 70 in a 65 will still get you a ticket. It might be a smaller fine, but that's not what you want to avoid. It's the points that cost you the most money in the long run.
Don't some states require the motorist to be driving 5mph over the speed limit (or more) to get a ticket? I believe PA has that.
you aren't really that dumb are you?
some states do not report the infraction to your insurance company if below a threshold, but you still get the ticket for breaking the law...
Originally posted by: Xavier434
meh...
http://www.ticketclinic.com/
Call them and call it a day. 15 minute phone call, one fax, and about $90 will solve this problem for you.
Originally posted by: jtvang125
He had the cruise control set to 70. There were other cars going just as fast if not a little faster than he was. He gets pulled over and chp says he was going atleast 80. When my brother says how can that be when he had the cc set to 70 and asked to see the radar reading the cop refuses to answer his questions or show him the reading. He just raised his voice and kept demanding for his license and registration.
Besides hiring a lawyer is there a good way to present his side of the story to the judge to show that yes he was doing 5 over but not the 15 over as said by the cop? Also if the cop never shows up in court the case gets dropped right?
Originally posted by: NuroMancer
I don't know if it works down there, but, you can go and get the Spedometer checked to see if it's accurate. If i isn't you may just get a ticket due to improper maintance, and not get the points.
Originally posted by: DrPizza
Originally posted by: NuroMancer
I don't know if it works down there, but, you can go and get the Spedometer checked to see if it's accurate. If i isn't you may just get a ticket due to improper maintance, and not get the points.
I don't know how common that is. I'd think the same as happens here would apply in a majority of locations: "That's weird officer, my speedometer said I was going 50mph." "ORLY? Okay, you're going to be ticketed for that too."