As a GENERAL rule the right to "speedy trial" runs within a 90 day time period. If the right to "speedy" was waived, it can run longer than that timeframe by mutual agreement between you (or your attorney) and the prosecutor.
Pleading Guilty was created in 1993.
Pleading Guilty has 468 pages.
Not unless the two charges were laid at the same time and place. If you have two separate speeding tickets, laid on different days, by different Officers, they will be heard at different times and dates, as the two different Police officers have different "Court days" , when they attend court for all the tickets they wrote in a 2 week period. I'd be careful about pleading "not guilty" on a speeding charge. Many Judges will charge you the MAXIMUM penalty, and require immediate payment, that day, if they feel that you are wasting the court's time. Remember that they hear dozens of similar charges each week and the chances of you having a NEW ARGUMENT are pretty slim.
In Trinity, California, a speeding ticket can cost up to $1,000 depending on how fast you were speeding and where. You have three options if you receive a speeding ticket in Trinity. You can attend traffic school, pay the civil penalty on the ticket or plead not guilty. Pleading not guilty and being found guilty, can result in a steep fine, points on your license and mandatory traffic school. Your insurance rates are also very likely to go up.
The man was pleading insanity, but he was nevertheless convicted as "guilty."
Guilty
You can try it.
no pleading no contest would your best bet
If you were guilty of speeding pay it
Yes, a defendant can change their plea from not guilty to guilty after initially pleading not guilty. This is known as a plea change or plea bargain, and it typically involves negotiations between the defendant and the prosecution. The court must approve the plea change before it becomes official.
if you are pleading not guilty you wish to fight the ruling i just went through this last month and i made the mistake of pleaing no contest and was found guilty before i could say another word
No contest.