Want this question answered?
Yes code enforcement officers have all the rights of writing tickets of a police officer do.
Expired inspection sticker IS a state charge, there are no local jurisdiction ordnances that equate to it.
Yes. He is checking for code violation and will call first.
only if he has a search warrent
They are assisting a police officer in the enforcement of the alcoholic beverage code.
This professional serves as a law-enforcement officer, with the authority to arrest employees who donot abide by the ethics code.
The Sidney, Nebraska police department is comprised of 14 full-time law enforcement officers and one code enforcement officer. The name of the Police Chief is BJ Wilkinson. Other officer's names are not on the police department website.
Depending on what you mean by law? If a state statute was violated by a law enforcement officer and you want to report it the first thing I would do is contact the law enforcement officer's agency where he or she is employed by. Contact there Internal Affairs department and report the actions to them so it can be investigated. Sometimes police officers live by a code of brotherhood so your next step would be to contact your state's law enforcement agency. Here in Florida it would be the Florida Department of Law enforcement.
Because I didn't want to break any laws, I asked a code enforcement officer if it was permissible to put up a fence without a permit.
== == You still have to appear in court, on the "court date" shown on the ticket, and argue the facts about the incorrect information. Approach the Prosecutor, before court starts, and show the ticket, and ask, POLITELY, for it to be "with-drawn". He/she will decide to proceed or not.
The only signature on a traffic ticket in California is that of the person getting the ticket. The officer is identified, and he fills out the citation, but he does not sign it. Here's the scoop. An officer saw you operating a vehicle in violation of the vehicle code. He pulls you over and cites you. The signature on the ticket is that of the person being cited - you. The signature is a promise to appear and answer the charge (made by the officer) and nothing more. That's all the signature is. If you refuse to sign the citation, the officer takes you downtown and your car gets towed. There isn't much middle ground. Either you promise to appear in court to answer the charges (by signing), or you are held in lieu of your failure to promise to appear (which your signature represents). Law enforcement types and the courts have been down this road before. Sign the damn ticket or cuff up. When an officer issues a citation, he is supposed to explain that the signature is just a promise to appear and not an admission of guilt. And it says right on the citation that it is not an admission of guilt but only a promise to appear. Don't be stupid about this one.
the secret code is ticket