It's possible, but it's more likely you will be arrested for failing to appear on the original citation. Arrest warrants do not expire. They are valid until served or recalled.
The ticket can be dismissed if your license was valid on the day of the ticket and you bring it to court with you. (Texas)
Then you won't get it dismissed or the cost lowered.
For the rest of your life unless you get it dismissed by the court.
Yes, a person can have an expired inspection ticket dismissed if they get the vehicle inspected before the court date. It is very important to have a safe vehicle on the road.
They can issue you an 'unsafe equipment violation' ticket. In many states these are dismissed if you can appear in court with proof that the deficiency was fixed within a certain time period.
I've heard from two close friends that upon their case dismissals, there were NO court costs.
Call the number listed on the ticket and ask clerk for verification of court date. A warrant could be issued for your arrest if you fail to appear on court date.
Check your calander carefully and be sure that it is a holiday. If so, go to court on the next business day.
Depends on what state you live in. But yes, if you have good evidence to refute it, you may be able to get it dismissed. Otherwise take trafficschool.com to dismiss the ticket without going to court.
Just because the officer isn't in court doesn't mean your charge will be automatically dismissed. The first time you go to court may be an arraignment date where the officer isn't even summoned to court. If you plead not guilty, he will be summoned for the next court date. If he never shows after a few court dates, then your charge is likely to be dismissed, but by then you've missed enough work to more than pay for the ticket.
It will greatly depend on the jurisdiction and the judge. In some cases they may dismiss the case.
Yes, a person can 'beat' and expired tag traffic ticket in most states. If a person gets the car inspected and gets a new tag before the court date, the ticket is usually dismissed.