Use that excuse during your court appearance and see if the judge believes you or not.
Yes. A perfect example of this would be being issued a traffic ticket.
If this is a traffic ticket, your insurance would take the hit.
In the traffic police, you would learn how to conduct a traffic stop.
Well it depends. He couldn't receive a ticket if he was on duty. If he was off duty though yes he could receive a ticket and he would have to do what you would normally do if you got a ticket depending on the punishment for the state it was received in.
Go to court anyways and have the judge sign off on it just in case and you wont get in trouble if the officer didnt sign it, cuz it would be the officers fault.
California Speeding Ticket Usually you will receive a courtesy notice from the court in about two to three weeks. It will tell you the fine and if you are eligible for traffic school. Usually the traffic school is your best option since this keeps the ticket off your record and avoids an insurance rate hike. If you plead not guilty you lose the possibility of traffic school. Most CA jurisdictions now accept online traffic school. You can check for your court at Online Traffic School
There would not be a limit on a ticket. A ticket serves as notice of a violation and is the charge. It doesn't go away.
One example would be a traffic ticket.
That would depend on the charge. One speeding ticket might not. One DUI certainly would.
In Colorado, it is possible for a city to put out a warrant if a person fails to pay a traffic ticket. The best option would be to go to the city courthouse and pay the ticket immediately.
most likely not
if getting a traffic ticket was avoidable i would speed all the time