Call over to each of the 4 agencies and give them your name. Tell them you lost the ticket and want to pay it. They'll check your name against their ticket database and see if you are in their system.
Call the police and give an accurate as possible description of the vehicle (including license number if you can get it) and give the direction of travel. Speeding is a misdemeanor offense and an officer has to actually see it themselves before they can take any enforcement action.
Th answer is higher enforcement
yes in fact they do after like 60 or 90 days depending on what county you are in.
It's possible but unlikely. Most speeding tickets don't result in a trial; much less an appeal.
you will have to return to the state where the infraction occured most likely. or send in your fine to the state. check with your locallaw enforcement and DMV
Call the police and give an accurate as possible description of the vehicle (including license number if you can get it) and give the direction of travel. Speeding is a misdemeanor offense and an officer has to actually see it themselves before they can take any enforcement action.
Th answer is higher enforcement
Yes, absolutely. People will rarely speed if they see a law enforcement officer.
I know in my expierience with law enforcement it's called a speed trap, however, I have never heard of a situation where the person speeding was pulled over 30 minutes later. That is a big gap leaving room for error in vehicle tracking. But to answer your question one police officer running radar may have you locked in as speeding when you pass his location and pass it on over the radio to another officer down the road. I work on a military installation and we have had speed enforcement events where we would have one police officer shooting radar and a another police officer directing the vehicles speeding into a parking lot and another police officer cutting the tickets.
You can. Several areas have photo enforcement for speeding, or red lights.
yes in fact they do after like 60 or 90 days depending on what county you are in.
Yes, it is possible, if you have evidence for your side.
not sure what you mean by "someone opens their car door is hit", but usually, the person speeding is at fault. He IS speeding afterall, which is illegal in the first place..Disagree: It is the responsiblity of the person opening the car door to ascrtain if there is oncoming traffic and it is safe to do so. It may be YOUR contention that the oncoming car was speeding - how are you going to prove it?The possible result (from a law enforcement perspective) - the person whose door was struck could be ticketed and (if insured) the insurance companies will probably fight it out between themselves.
Crimes generally ignored by law enforcement and violated by the public. Marijuana and speeding are a few examples of penumbral crimes.
The number of people who receive speeding tickets per year can vary widely depending on the region and enforcement practices, but millions of speeding tickets are issued annually in the United States alone. It is important to follow speed limits and traffic laws to avoid receiving a ticket.
It's possible but unlikely. Most speeding tickets don't result in a trial; much less an appeal.
you will have to return to the state where the infraction occured most likely. or send in your fine to the state. check with your locallaw enforcement and DMV