Fighting? 100%. Winning? 0%. Think about what you were doing, and then imagine that you are the judge. Is the judge going to be more concerned with whether it was 101, 105 or 92? Heck no! The judge is going to be remembering the last time he was on Hwy 101 and somebody passed him at 80+. Fighting a losing battle is certainly your right, but my experience tells me that unless there is something *very*special* that you left out, going to court is going to cost you much more than just sending a check. I also think the officer made an error. Had I been the one stopping you it would not have been a speeding ticket. At that speed you would have likely received a Reckless Driving citation.
Yes, you can.
3 chances
As long as the officer that issued the ticket can be identified, say by the ticket number, the signature is not going to get it thrown out.
if someone received a speeding ticket in the state of Utah and then went to pay it but the clerk said it had not yet been filed by the officer, then what is the statute of limitations for the officer to file the ticket? i think it should be less than one week.Mactord
You do whatever you were instructed to do by the Officer or what is written on the ticket. Do not ignore this.
The cast of Speeding Ticket - 2008 includes: Rick Gifford as Officer Steinhauer Leyna Weber as Mandy
Yes. No - its a jerky thing to do, but you should not be speeding if there arent any cops around - so they CAN ticket you if you were speeding when you didnt see them.
For a speeding ticket issued by a Police Officer, Yes! For an alleged speed camera violation, No!
no you won't if they say you won't.
Doctor's Excuse. If you can't get one, then when you go to court ask if the officer who gave you the ticket is there, chances are slim that the officer showed, and before entering a plea request your case be continued or dismissed. If there is no arresting officer, then there is no witness against you, & 99.9% of the time you will get a continuance for review or a dismissal.
yes.
Generally, if you got a speeding ticket, you're not going to get out of it. If you admitted guilt to the officer, you're almost guaranteed not to get out of it. If you go to court, and the officer shows up (if he doesn't, you may get out of it, but that's not guaranteed) and says "he admitted that he was speeding", you're toast. Short story, pay the ticket and don't speed next time :)