Yes
Yes, and some (especially highway patrols) do. However, most police officers will go out of their way to avoid citing another officer. This practice is called "professional courtesy," and it is somewhat controversial.
It depends on where they are. In the U.S. very generally speaking, police officers enforce laws, investigate crime, serve warrants, answer emergency calls, and write traffic tickets.
It depends on where they are. In the U.S. very generally speaking, police officers enforce laws, investigate crime, serve warrants, answer emergency calls, and write traffic tickets.
It doesn't matter where they sit. If you are speeding, they can write you a ticket. How and where they are when they determine you are speeding doesn't matter. (Neither does the state!)
Yes. California peace officers retain their police powers throughout the state.
Yes code enforcement officers have all the rights of writing tickets of a police officer do.
No, city police in Illinois do not have jurisdiction to write speeding tickets on state highways outside of their city limits. State highways fall under the jurisdiction of the Illinois State Police or the relevant county sheriff's department.
You can get the tickets for free once you know when you are going you can write for tickets, by sending a S.A.S.E. to: TICKETS - "The Price is Right" CBS Television City. 7800 Beverly Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90036 but a travel agent could include them in a package if you ask.
If the tickets were issued around the same time, it could be that the tickets are generated in batches. Different officers or meter maids might be carrying (or have authority for) different groups of numbered tickets. When I write tickets and they are not in numerical order it is because: 1) I ran out of tickets and had to write from two different books or 2) I made a mistake and destroyed a ticket.
Write in chronological order
In some states, an off duty police officer can write a speeding ticket. It will depend on the laws in your specific state. You can always go to court to fight the ticket.
Police get a good laugh as they write you that tickets that could cost you $500 and jail time.