Want this question answered?
The questioner doesn't say for what offense, but, yes, moving violations CAN be issued on 'private' property.
Yes, you can be issued a citation on private property.
Officers of the law can issue citations anywhere, even on private property.
You cannot be fined or issued a citation for having expired tags on a vehicle which is on private property. However when the vehicle is on a public roadway you can be issued a citation.
Lenin decreed that all private ownership of property was now abolished and that all property, businesses, etc were now the property of the state.
no
You can, but it's not required and typically no citations are issued unless it's a misdemeanor like DUI.
Was it a traffic ticket, or a ticket for causing a nuisance by excessively loud music?
No, it is a 100.00 Georgia Treasury note issued April 6, 1864
Yes you can be ticketed. Most parking lots are actually private property but they still come under the Vehicle and Traffic law. It all depends on how the law defines a roadway and in the case of unsafe backing there is not restriction on where the event occurs.
No, if you have been issued a ticket, the concept of a statute of limitations no longer applies.
Not once they have been issued. Massachusetts has notified you of the violation, so there is no longer a limitation.