You have to decide what is at stake concerning the ticket. Will your insurance go up? Were you falsy ticketed? Will you lose your license? Basically you must weigh the cost of the ticket over the cost of the attorney.
Only if you plan to fight the ticket. 95% of the time you fight it you lose those and if you ever run across a late fee make a dmn good excuse and plead no contest! TKH
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.
No, there was not one. Pennsylvania had already issued the ticket, which is notification of the violation.
They stay for ever. Unless u choose to clear them of by going to traffic school.
The Statute of Limitations does not apply to traffic tickets. You have received appropriate notice of the violation and decided not to fight it. The money is a valid debt and needs to be resolved.
No, I have never received a ticket that was not filed.
No, Naruto doesn't ever fight Guy.
No, I have never received a fake attorney letter.
Yes, it should.
No
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Not really, though some jurisdictions will stop trying to collect, or declare on amnesty on tickets on a specific time frame. There really is none. A traffic ticket does not expire and is not subject to a statute of limitations. The statute of limitations is to prevent one from being accused of a crime when the witnesses may no longer be available and defense difficult. In this case, you have already been notified of the violation and have not defended against it in the time allotted. A traffic ticket is a notice of violation.