Topic: speeding ticket : need advise
in Forum: Off Topic

C3VR Founder
Not sure if that helped.
Good luck!
-Adam Wartell
NCM Lifetime Member #1222
Founder: C3 Vette Registry
C4 Vette Registry, C6 Vette Registry
My first Vette, now owned by JB79:


Moderator
SLOW DOWN!!!



sorry!


Joel Adams
C3VR Lifetime Member #56
My Link
(click for Texas-sized view!) NCRS
"Money can't buy happiness -- but somehow it's more comforting to cry in a CORVETTE than in a Kia"

All of this makes a radar detector sound awfully cheap....
I've really been wanting to find out what "top speed" on my car is, but every time I go out, I see a cop on the road! I got up to 90mph on the way home the other day by accident (really - I was doing 70 and punched it to pass some retard), and that's the fastest I've had it.
I wanted a Corvette my whole life, but I never dreamed of all the wonderful people I would meet because of it!
Take it to court...assuming you have a clean driving record (this has no chance if you don't), and ask for the court's lenience...admit what you did or plead no contest. Dress professionally and act respectful to the judge and the court. You will be amazed how many defendants dress like trash and act the same way toward the court, judge and the whole system. A judge gets very tired of that behavior and is impressed by professional, respectful conduct.
Simply tell the judge what happened and you don't want to lose your insurance, have it raised, etc. Don't beg, just be respectful and factual. Quite often I've seen a judge give offenders with otherwise clean records a choice between the fine and points and double the fine and no points. This also worked for me years ago before I was a police officer and was cited for driving 59+ mph in a 30 mph area in a car with collector's insurance. I got a year's probation. After a year with no violations, it was dismissed.
Again, I don't know Canadian laws or court rules, so this may not work there. You also may get lucky and the police officer may not show for court. In the US, that will get the case dismissed.

Another friend tells me to call the court house directly and ask them for a higher fine with no points/no suspension; which is probably what that lawyer will do anyway.
I like the check with the couthouse deal. In the states lawyers talk to the prosecutor and cut the deal based on the clients record, status, reputation,$$$, etc. I would guess that Canadian courts are similar since most court system foundations are based on a version of parlimentary procedures.