There is no way they switched seats without the police noticing. Your son was speeding and blamed it on his friend.
In principle, absolutely. In practice, it depends on each individual citation and the driving record of the offender. For example, a driver with a bad record could be denied eligibility for a defensive driving course if they get a moderate speeding ticket. But even a driver with a clean record will usually be denied eligibility if they were speeding 25 mph or more over the limit. If you have received a citation, the only way to know for sure is check the court records. The easiest way to do this is to log on to the DPS website, enter your citation number, and check if you're eligible.
A speeding ticket. Though an off duty cop said he would have taken Justin in for reckless driving, but he had no say and a speeding ticket is what he received.
How are you speeding if your not driving???
Yes; you can get a speeding ticket driving anywhere.
Most states, after a conviction, will send a notice of conviction to your home state and the violations will be listed on your driving history the same as if they were comitted in your home state. Could earn you, (depending on your prior record) a revocation of license, or at least a warning letter.
The purpose of defensive driving course is to refresh or teach for the first time, defensive driving skills. In some states, defensive driving is allowed after receiving a citation (most times for speeding) as a way to dismiss the ticket while re-training the driver in what it is to be a safe driver.
What is the statute of limitations for driving citation tickets in California? VC
YES.....the carpool ticket is considered a regular moving violation like a speeding ticket of any other moving violation.
Not for speeding but possibly for dangerous driving.Not for speeding but possibly for dangerous driving.Not for speeding but possibly for dangerous driving.Not for speeding but possibly for dangerous driving.
will a speeding ticket in Europe affect my U.S. driving record?
106A is just driving over the speed limit. The fine depends on a) how much over the limit you are driving, and b) whether or not you have received a previous citation for this offense. The fines range from $227 (first offense, driving from 1 to 15 kph over posted limit) to $2,412.41 (third or subsequent offense, driving more than 31 kph over the posted limit in a school, construction or other special zone [doubled fine])
The ticket will be reflected on your driving record, regardless of where you received it. That's why you need to pay it; failure to do so could result in a suspended license.