There is nothing to fight. The expiration date on a vehicle inspection ticket is a matter of fact. If it was expired, you owe the fine and there is no way out of it.
Apparently in most cases, if you show up to court with everything up to date and a good registration you may have the fine dismissed and just pay a $10 administration fee. If you're guilty, you don't get points on your license at least because it's a non-moving violation.
Short answer: Yes a mail carrier can get a ticket. I know this because I am a mail carrier and I have a court date coming up to fight a ticket I was given while on the job and performing my duties.
Instead of paying the ticket, you need to show up for the court hearing. It will not be easy to win the case if the police officer shows up for court.
they won't be mad about 1 traffic ticket If you only have one ticket you can just pay it....just that easy...or fight it and wait until you are found not responsible or responsible and go from there. One ticket is not a huge deal.
That does not sound too good for the Police Officer. I would take it to court and fight it. I think you have a good shot of getting it tossed out. Good Luck!
Not neccasarilly , especially if you got stopped for another violation ,plus you were suppossed to check the vehicle before you drove it. that is what you will hear from the judge .
No, tickets don't expire. If you get a ticket, you get a ticket. In CA, your ticket requires that you appear in court either fight it or pay it and receive your sentencing and traffic school if available. But if you evade your ticket and dodge court, a warrant can and probably will be issued for your arrest. My advice, just pay it.
Yes you can. You can fight any ticket regardless of method of issue. Just make sure you have a solid case against for whatever ticket it is you want to fight.
If the actual ticket was generated in 1998, you could fight it if you could prove you never knew about the citation, which is unlikely. Once a citation is issued, it's usually the reponsibility of the citizen to take care of it, not the court to remind him.
You still have the pay the ticket or go to court to fight it signed or not.
The same way you fight anything else; with a sword.
It can help to get a lawyer.
Sorry, but there is nothing to fight. The only legitimate reason to park in a handicapped designated parking place is that you, or one of the passengers at that time, is handicapped and the vehicle was displaying a handicapped parking permit. "Was the vehicle parked in a handicapped spot?" is a yes or no question. "Did the vehicle display a properly authorized handicapped permit?" is a yes or no question. If the first answer is yes, and the second answer is no, there is nothing to argue, quilty as charged. If the answers are different, then you can fight the ticket.
How do you fight a collection agency on an out of state improper turn ticket from 14 years ago?
Pay It
Yes. There are many trafic attorneys out there that are willing to help you fight and beat your speeding ticket. They also usually offer a free consultation.
You can fight any ticket. Winning in court is another thing. I would get the speedometer discrepancy documented and then get a lawyer.