Question:
My husband got a speeding ticket and is going to court. Doing 65 in a 45..any ideas on what to say to the judge to get out of paying?
Answers:
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First time I went to court, I wasn't prepared enough even though I had some pretty good legal ticket-fighting sources. When I was up, even though there were only a few other people, the judge would cut me off a lot when I tried to nail to cop with some appropriate questions; reflecting on that, I realized it sounded like an opposing legal team voicing "objection" and that he was being a prosecutor afterall. I learned my lesson from there that I must have some appropriate documentation ready to keep those kinds of judges in check. In the end though, luckily he threw out the ticket but sentenced me to driver improvement school in order to avoid getting points penalized against my driving record. I still had to pay the court fee. Bottom line: let's say I neither won nor lost.
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Second time I went to court to fight another speeding ticket, the courtroom was very crowded. Despite that when I was up, the judge was pretty fair where at least he didn't cut me off. He even mentioned that should the case laws I presented him be relevant to the state we were in instead of other states (forgot to bring the in-state one), he could've dismissed the whole case in a heartbeat. From there, I asked away my questions trying to nail that deputy on calibration of the radar he used. In the end, when I asked him to show the calibration certificate in which he didn't have, the judge finally dismissed the ticket. Bottom line: I won.
If he's really that determined to fight the ticket, you guys could check out www.tipmra.com. I got my legal ticket-fighting sources from www.beatmyspeedingticket.com for $30. It was a small price to pay as I reflect on it after beating one speeding ticket in that round 2 of ticket-fighting. If I lost that case, it could've costed me up to $200 from the ticket fine plus court fees, not to mention getting points or penalty on your driving record and having your auto insurance rates hiked up.
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Even when he does manage to beat that ticket, he should definitely slow down. Imagining myself in cops' shoes, I can understand it's for the sake of preventing car crash fatalities. I had a few close calls from overspeeding. I saw a very gory picture somewhere online of a teen girl who died in a car crash, and it was said she drove around 100mph on some highway in CA.
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20 miles over? He'll pay!Do you know your way around Longbenton?
If he gets his spedometer checked and it's out of calibration, the judge might change the charge to "driving with defective equipment."
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When I've gone to court, the judge has changed it to "disobeying a traffic sign."
Is this his first ticket? If his record is otherwise clean, he might say that he didn't see the sign, or whatever is true and believable, and the judge might reduce the charge. But at 20 miles over, he's unlikely to dismiss the charges altogether. But it's always worth a try.
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unless there was a serious reason for speeding then i would guess you will be paying the fine, smartest thing would be telling your husband not to speed..Apologizing in traffic accidents?
heres me calling the kettle black
Allow me to rephrase the question you just asked.
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"My husband just broke the law, but it's a misdemeanor punishable by a fine. How can he get out of paying the fine?"
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If your husband was speeding, his best bet is to pay the fine and move on with his life. The vast majority of judges you will face in traffic court want the cases to move quickly, and unless you have an airtight case or a sympathetic judge, all your husband will be doing by fighting the ticket is wasting everyone's time, including his own.
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Sure, he might think that he doesn't "deserve" the ticket, but if he was speeding, then he *does* deserve it. Here's why: police officers target drivers who are speeding, certainly, but they're doing more than that: they're targeting drivers who are INATTENTIVE. Drivers who are both traveling significantly faster than the speed limit and not paying attention are, by far, the most likely to cause a serious accident. The fact that your husband didn't notice the police car that was clocking him tells us that he was not paying enough attention to be going twenty miles an hour over the speed limit.
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So, to sum it up: your husband was speeding, and inattentive, and so was dangerous. He was right to be ticketed, and hopefully in the future he will either slow down, pay more attention, or both.
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