If a police officer suspects that, as you sit in your stationary vehicle, you could be under the influence of alcohol (smells alcohol as the police officer walks past your car) or drugs (due to your strange behaviour and glassy eyes), he or she can investigate further.
If a police officer suspects that, as you sit in your stationary vehicle, you could be under the influence of alcohol (smells alcohol as the police officer walks past your car) or drugs (due to your strange behaviour and glassy eyes), he or she can investigate further.
A vehicle just sitting with an expired registration is not a violation of the law. If the police officer had witnessed the vehicle in operation with an expired registration, then there would be a legal violation. Even if the vehicle wasn't there a couple hours earlier, the police officer has no way of knowing for sure that it was driven there, unless they actually saw it in operation. However, an abandoned vehicle, or a vehicle parked illegally, has the same status regardless of the registration.
I approached a police officer with your question, and she replied no. Generally to lose your CDL it is an alcohol related offense or a moving violation.
The term "mover" usually means a moving traffic violation, such as speeding, careless driving, failure to yield right-of-way, etc. When an officer usually uses that term, they are saying they cited someone for a moving violation.
Registration.
No. The officer could always say you refused to sign. Besides , you obviously know if you were stopped for a moving violation. Don't try to weasel out of this. You may just get in more trouble. Go to traffic court and tell it to the judge. Call the local PD [ non-emergency number ] and see if the officer is required to even request that you sign.
Only if you are speeding over the posted limits.
The traffic violation with code 1050020 66 is exclusive information that can only be provided by the California police. A police officer is responsible for this information.
The officer can ticket you for the traffic violation, he or she can arrest you if there are mitigating circumstances.
You can be charged with "Common Law: INTERFERING WITH A POLICE OFFICER"; it can be found in the district court complaint language manual (Comlaw4).
Usually the court provides a bail or fine schedule to the police department.
A speeding ticket is a public document that can be accessed through a request to the police department. You have heard the term "ambulance chasers".