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17 responses total.
It doesn't matter what you do. You were still speeding, and if you were caught then you need to pay the consequences.
Except that there are different penalties for different speeding tickets. If you wanted to go to court and argue about it, it would probably depend on what the ticket was for. Was the ticket written for exactly what the radar said, or were you given a break? I got a ticket a few months ago, and the cop said I was going 84 in a 65 zone, even though I think I was only doing about 80. I decided it would do me no good to take it to court because the ticket was written for 70 and there was no way I was going to be able to argue that I was going slower than that.
this is nearly EXACTLY what happened to me. I mentioned the possible discrepancy to the officer, who was very understanding and wrote the ticket for the speed I felt I was travelling at.
But eithor way, if you have to pay more thenm to damn bad. If you weren't breaking the law in the first place then you wouldn't be in the situation. I'm arrested for killing 30 people when I only killed 25 and I don't want the extra 5 life terms. Gimme a break.
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Since I usually drive the speed limit, a ticket would be a bid deal for me. The only thing you can do is show up in court, and then it's your word against the cop's. (oops, meant "big deal")
I'd probably fight it if the points or the money were important to me. If not, I'd probably skip it but feel resentful for a while.
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In that case, I would probably appologize, thank him for not giving me a ticket, and drive on feeling very lucky.
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In that case I would go to court and protest it. But only if I were in the right.
I have long hair, and I believe that that is probable cause for a cop
to pull me over. So, it really doesn't matter what I would say.
It's there word against mine. Who do you think the court would believe?
Hmmmmm......?
I suppose it depends whether the cop even shows up. The analogy to murdering people is absurd. In our society, speeding by modest amounts is not considered unethical. It's not even really criminal.
I'd own up to speeding the amount shown on my speedometer...and let the officer know I'd be only too happy to be cited for that...but I would _also_ let him know that if he attemped to cite me for something I did not do, I'd see him in court. (Interesting how well this approach works...either because the officers have less faith in their radar guns than they would like us to believe, or simply because they don't feel like dealing with the bother of a court appearance...go figure...)
Gee. Around here, the cops almost never show up for speeding tickets. It is best here to *always* plead not-guilty.
If I knew I were speeding, I'd just plead guilty and take the points. Then again, if I KNEW i were not exceeeding the limit, I'd fight it tooth and nail.
Accept the ticket politely with a"yes sir" and have the speedometer tested as well as a background check into the officers history and perhaps a staging of similar incidents in the officers "territory" to determine equipment or personnel error vs outright corruption.
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