(in the US) No. No traffic courts or juvenile courts exist at the federal level.
Maybe, If your acting juvenile.
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The majority of states no longer expunge juvenile traffic records when the person becomes an adult. Juvenile traffic offenses are generally adjudicated in the same traffic court as those of adults. In some states the parents have the option of requesting the minor child's traffic case be held in juvenile rather than adult court.
I know of no traffic violation that amounts to a felony offense and of no traffic violation which would fall under the jurisdictioon of the federal governmnent.
The Federal government does not regulate traffic offenses. These are regulated by the states. The Federal rules deal with specific types of transportation, usually with insuring the free flow of traffic across state boundries.
Tickets? There is no juvenile court for traffic tickets. They all go to traffic court. If you're old enough to drive, you're old enough to deal with the consequences.
A divorce court is an example of a family court. These are considered to be among the lower courts than handle civil matters.
When whichever agency responsible for that road makes the determination. Different roads will be administered at local/city/town/township/etc., county/parish, state, and federal levels. That's a lot of agencies with a lot of different ways of determining this.
Rather, a car stoppping at a light is an example of deceleration but one of the possible example of acceleration when a car stops at a traffic light is a pedestrian accelerating across the road or other car in different lanes accelerating to move to on in their journey.
If the officer feels there is probable cause to do so then absolutely. Age has nothing to do with it.
warningA merging traffic sign an example of a warning.warning signyellow diamond
I'm assuming you're asking which court would deal with a juvenile traffic tickets. Generally this would be a regular traffic court, unless it rose to a certain level of crime. Then either a family court or a juvenile court would hear the case, depending on location. If you want to find out more about your specific location (county, state), check out Court Reference. You can find links to local court reference information from there.