It may depend on the agency and their internal policies but answering in general terms, no, they cannot. All violation ticket books are issued with serially numbered tickets and every ticket must be accounted for by the issuing officer, or he must supply his superiors with a satisfactory answer as to why the ticket was not issued, or it was taken back.
It is never removed from your record. If you do not pay the ticket your license will be suspended and a warrant issued for your arrest.
Well, you can't "get out" of any ticket that you have been issued. The officer who issued the ticket is accusing you of committing the infraction for which he issued the ticket. If you feel that you did not commit the infraction, then you have the right to take the matter to court and fight it. It's the same thing as if you were stopped and given a ticket for running a stop sign: it's your word against the officer's. The question that the court will ask you in a defense like this is: why would the officer stop you and issue you a ticket for not wearing a seatbelt if you were wearing one.
It's a fix-it ticket. Just take it off (and replace with lighter, legal tint), get ticket written off by CHP, city police or sheriff. Pay fine...mine was $10...and that's it.
To take traffic school for a ticket, you typically need to request permission from the court that issued the ticket. Once approved, you can enroll in a traffic school course either online or in person to fulfill the requirements and potentially reduce the impact of the ticket on your driving record.
It is true. If your friend does not take care of the ticket in Minnesota, they will issue a Failure to Appear warrant for her arrest. Realistically, it sounds like a misdemeanor charge, and Misdemeanors do not get entered into the National Crime Information Center (NCIC). While a warrant would be issued for her arrest in Minnesota, it probbly wouldn't even show up in California. And even if she did get stopped in Minnesota, depending on the Sheriff's Office policy in the county the warrant/ticket was issued, they may not even seek extradition if its not within a certain range. Its better to pay the ticket.
In the Bang card game, players take on roles like Sheriff, Outlaw, or Deputy. The goal is to eliminate the Outlaws if you're the Sheriff, or to eliminate the Sheriff if you're an Outlaw. Players take turns playing cards to attack, defend, or heal. Each player has a specific number of lives, and the game ends when one side achieves their goal.
It may delay it, but probably wont deny it. What I mean is, you will almost certainly have to take care of the ticket (which if unpaid, a bench warrant for your arrest is issued) which means that if you ever get pulled over by a cop or have a background check done, the warrent will show up. As long as you take care of the ticket, you should not have any problems with it.
You can notify authorities of the whereabouts of said person and then it is their decision whether or not to take any action.
The police officer may have taken your license for reasons such as verifying your identity, checking for outstanding warrants, or conducting further investigation. It is not always necessary for a ticket to be issued in order for an officer to take your license.
Also called a "Forthwith Subpoena" or "Forthwith Summons" - it gives the Sheriff authority to take you into immediate custody and take you directly to the court that issued it.
Ticket to what?
Contact the Sheriff's Department (not the police department) for the COUNTY in which the person is residing and alert them to the person's current location, the county which issued the warrant and the person's name or other identifying information. If the warrant is for a felony or serious misdemeanor, the Sheriff's Department will take it more seriously. If you are reporting them for a lessor offense and the person is outside the county in which the warrant was issued, you may not get any response.