A traffic-offense lawyer would have it thrown out on the technicality that you were never there. Having the offense not appear on your record is better for your insurance rate (for three years), so please, check it out.
Yes, it can!
Yes. My sister got a ticket for speeding, but the officer had written down the wrong speed limit. She wrote to the court for the ticket and had the ticket waived.
In Kentucky the vehicle name is not going to invalidate the ticket. The make and model is not critical to the nature of the violation.
I have the same question! I was looking over the ticket I got last night and realized the officer clearly wrote a 9 as the last number in my drivers license number and the last number of my drivers license number is really a 3...I really hope this makes the ticket void.
You should consult with an attorney who does DUI cases in your area. The ticket could probably be challenged but you need expert help.
Either they wrote it wrong, you wrote it wrong, or the code is for the wrong region, a US code does not work on a European version of the game, for example.
Peter Wright
If he doesn't have your correct license number, he doesn't have the correct information about you. Right? I'd ignore the ticket. Stupid officer.
it was wrote to tell people that slavery was wrong
You may have a chance. I was given a citation for speeding in D.C. and the officer wrote the wrong street name on the ticket. I beat it in court as I contended that I was not on Maine Avenue that day and the officer admitted that he and I were on MacArthur Blvd., not Maine Ave. Case closed. Information must be accurate.
You spelled "for" wrong
We are not told of David's location when this Psalm was written.