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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Donut Shop
Question In Regards To Stop Signs & Ticketing
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<blockquote data-quote="KingCobra03SVT" data-source="post: 6277539" data-attributes="member: 53716"><p><span style="color: Red">I know an officer can write as many tickets as he or she pleases as long as people are breaking the law. I understand they are doing their job.</span></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><span style="color: red">Not quite, once again I am not questioning the officers work ethic.</span></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><span style="color: red">No</span></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><span style="color: red">This is along the lines of my question. Basically I was asking in this situation, it pretty much is the officers word over your word especially with no video evidence of the infraction. So like Adam was saying that you must present evidence in cogent truthful matter and pretty much from there on it's up to the the judge to decide in your favor or the officers.</span></p><p><span style="color: red"></span></p><p><span style="color: red">I understand that officers are doing their job but I strongly believe that they can make a misjudgement every once and awhile. So lets say a person gets a ticket for rolling through a stop sign and they are being 100% honest that they did not run or roll through the stop sign. However the officer is certain that you did. How do you prove that in court? Officers word over drivers word? I can tell my story exactly as it happens and be 100% honest and tell the truth but the judge could still take sides with the officer. So it is kind of a gamble basically.</span></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="KingCobra03SVT, post: 6277539, member: 53716"] [COLOR="Red"]I know an officer can write as many tickets as he or she pleases as long as people are breaking the law. I understand they are doing their job.[/COLOR] [COLOR="red"]Not quite, once again I am not questioning the officers work ethic.[/COLOR] [COLOR="red"]No[/COLOR] [COLOR="red"]This is along the lines of my question. Basically I was asking in this situation, it pretty much is the officers word over your word especially with no video evidence of the infraction. So like Adam was saying that you must present evidence in cogent truthful matter and pretty much from there on it's up to the the judge to decide in your favor or the officers. I understand that officers are doing their job but I strongly believe that they can make a misjudgement every once and awhile. So lets say a person gets a ticket for rolling through a stop sign and they are being 100% honest that they did not run or roll through the stop sign. However the officer is certain that you did. How do you prove that in court? Officers word over drivers word? I can tell my story exactly as it happens and be 100% honest and tell the truth but the judge could still take sides with the officer. So it is kind of a gamble basically.[/COLOR] [/QUOTE]
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Question In Regards To Stop Signs & Ticketing
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