5/7/09

Know Your Rights! How to Fight a Traffic Ticket

You see the dreaded red lights flashing in your rear view mirror. The police officer approaches your car, and before you can get a single word out he simply says “license and registration.” You sign next to the X, and a few weeks later, you get a notice in the mail saying you need to show up at a courthouse or pay a fine of several hundred dollars.

Let’s say that you feel the ticket was unfair. The cop says he caught you on radar going 85, but you know for a fact that you had the cruise control set at 75. He clearly meant to pull over that other silver Nissan Maxima and got you instead. Or maybe you’ve already done traffic school, and your insurance rates are going to take a major hike if you take another point on your record. You need to challenge this ticket. What do you do?

Pay attention to the copy of the ticket given to you at the time you are pulled over. Sometimes it will have a date to appear, sometimes it won’t. The court will send you a notice in the mail about when you need to appear in court to challenge the ticket. However, if that notice gets lost in the mail, you are out of luck if you fail to appear. The court (unfairly) assumes that if the notice is mailed, you have received it. A failure to appear will result in a civil assessment (penalty) of $300 in addition to the underlying fine for the traffic infraction.

Your initial appearance is called the arraignment. At this time, the court will explain your rights to you and ask for a plea of guilty or not guilty. It will vary by the county, but if you have not done traffic school in the past year, you will generally be allowed to plead guilty and pay the fine plus an additional assessment (usually $40-$70) to attend traffic school. This will keep a point off your record. Traffic school is generally an eight hour course and costs another $40-$80.

If you are ineligible for traffic school or just want to contest an undeserved ticket, you can plead not guilty at your arraignment and set your case for trial. However, if you represent yourself at this stage, you must post bail, which will be for the amount of your fine. If you are represented by an attorney, you will not need to post bail, and it will not even be necessary for you to ever go to court.

When you plead not guilty you will set your case for trial, usually 4 to 6 weeks in the future. The trial will usually be in the same courtroom, and will consist of you and the officer who gave you the ticket telling the judge your story, similar to the format you’ve seen on “The People’s Court.” You have the right to present evidence such as photos, and to have witnesses testify in your defense. The officer who gave you the ticket, since he writes hundreds (or thousands) of tickets, will probably testify based upon his notes. The judge will decide if, based on the evidence testimony presented, it has been proved beyond a reasonable doubt if you committed the infraction.

If you are found guilty, the bail you previously posted will be forfeited, and a point (or two, if it is a more serious infraction such as reckless driving) will go on your record. If you are found not guilty, your bail will be returned by the court, usually via check within 4 to 6 weeks.

There are many ways to win at trial! The easiest way is if the officer simply does not show up. This is fairly common. Sometimes the officer won’t recall any details of the ticket, and will admit this, and the ticket and fine will be dismissed. Even if the officer does show up and remembers giving you the ticket, it still must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt that you committed every element of the violation alleged. If radar was used to cite you for speeding, there are technical rules that must be followed to allow the use of radar. If the citation was at night or in heavy traffic, the officer must demonstrate beyond a reasonable doubt that yours was the car that committed the violation. This can often be very difficult! You have a right to cross examine the officer and challenge his powers of observation. In short, it is VERY possible to win at trial!

Of course, the best way to fight and beat your traffic ticket is to retain an experienced attorney. By having an attorney on your side, you will not need to miss at least two days of work, you will not need to post bail of several hundred dollars, and you can be sure you are not hit with any failure to appear fines. Further, an attorney who has handled many cases exactly like yours will know just how to attack any traffic infraction, and will create the reasonable doubt that will make it impossible for you to be found guilty.

If you don’t want to pay increasingly expensive fines, not miss work, keep points off your record, and avoid car insurance increases, you should retain an attorney to fight your traffic ticket today. Contact the Law Offices of Scott R. Ball today for your free and completely confidential evaluation of your case.

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