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I hate to admit it, but I even had 2 once, and had the 90 days overlap. |
Just consider yourself lucky you are not in NJ.
In '92 I was pulled over for 67 in a 55, I was moving with traffic. Told it was just 2 pts so I paid it. Many hundreds in insurance surcharges over the next few years, and to add insult the limit was raised to 65 shortly after. |
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They just want $$ and will reduce it or make it not appear against ins. rate increases for 3 years... that's what costs. No one speeds over 15+ here :D |
Some good advice here , many smart Pelicans 😁. I will wait to hear from the lawyer I contacted this morning. I want to have a conversation on what the options are. I don't feel comfortable representing myself in court ........... I am no Perry Mason 😋. Court date is 8/3 so I have some time to get my crap together.
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Also I was very pleasant and professional to the officer . I gave no attitude or BS . We actually had a fairly pleasant conversation . He told me don't sweat it there are worse things in life . I respect officers they have a tough job . I just want to attempt to keep a clean driving record and no points so I don't get insurance raped . I have no problem paying a fine and/or a lawyer to achieve those goals .
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Many years ago, I had taken defensive driving and then had some other issue, and ended up having to request my record from Austin. When I received it, it showed the tickets that I'd taken defensive driving, but then showed "points assessed" as 0. At least the last time that I got a ticket if you used deferred adjudication, the ticket disappeared off of your record as if it had never occurred. |
Each prosecutors office has guidelines for how to handle speeding tickets. They will either give you a break or they won't, depending on their office policies. Almost any prosecutor offers you 1/2 off the fine if you plead guilty without making them go to a court trial. Remember, PLEADING NO CONTEST IS PLEADING GUILTY. So is pleading guilty with an explanation. Prosecutors love to get people to do things like that because it seems to make the defendant happy and it results in a conviction. I don't know if something got lost in translation with the first lawyer or what, but if you plead no contest you are convicted, will pay the fine, the ticket goes on your record and there is nothing a lawyer can do about it later.
You really need a lawyer to handle this for you, but it should only be a couple of hundred dollars. The lawyer will know or find out what the office policy is for you and get you your best deal. You can't really do it yourself because without being a lawyer you don't know what you don't know. The gold standard is to get the prosecutor to either amend the charge to some non-moving violation that isn't certified to the state or do some sort of deferred prosecution where the case is continued for a period of time and dismissed if you don't have any other charges and you pay an amount equal to the fine as prosecution costs. At the very least they will give you half off the fine, but you get stuck with a conviction. So call a lawyer who knows what he's doing in traffic court and he'll do for you what can be done. Good luck, |
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I prefer the Euro method of speeding tickets like I got hooked up with in Austria: you pay the cop on scene. It was scary as poop but 30 or 40 Euros later I was on my way.
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Hire a local attorney. Someone who appears in that court very often.
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Plead no contest and take driver school = no points - but still have to pay a fine and school tuition.
But no points on your record. |
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