Quote:
Originally Posted by kuruzero
Burden of proof on the officer sounds nice in theory but im talking the practical world. In practicality you have to disprove the officer, not the other way around... And no offense but your experience with a couple tickets (which i dont for a sec believe you got out of by giving that idealistic "but technically" speech to a judge) mounts a small sample size to my in court weekly in different jurisdictions for yrs experience... If the ticket is legit, there's ways to minimize the damage and get it taken off your record, but very very rarely will it be outright dismissed. Thats just the facts regardless of jurisdiction.
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I help out a facebook page specifically for students who get tickets for this BS because cops like to sit at the bottom of a hill to hand them out like chocolate (my school is near the top of the hill and the posted speed limit is 25 all the way up, which is nonsense)
Here are a few images from people who have beat their tickets with the defense I recommended to them. I've informed each of them before hand that I'm not a lawyer and am not certified to give legal advice and that any advice I do give them is only my opinion and they bear the responsibility of their actions.
This student only posted her refund check
The problem is always that people are constantly told that they cannot beat a ticket and they shouldn't even try. This is why cities are able to take advantage of us by giving bogus tickets. You're part of the problem if you say "just pay it".
Any other clever come backs?