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24 answers

Yes. The United States Supreme Court ruled that traffic violations are arrestable offenses, as they are a violation of the law.

By signing a citation, you are not admitting guilt or agreement with the citation or the officer's words or actions. Your signature on the citation serves as an appearance bond. It is called a "signature bond," because it does not require any monetary amount, just your signature. By signing, you are stating that you will either plead guilty and pay the fine or plead not guilty and show up in court.

By refusing to sign the citation, you are refusing to give your signature as a promise to show up in court. Without the signature bond, you must post some other type of bond. That generally means that you will be placed in jail until you post some type of monetary bond. Some states allow the officer to take your driver's license in lieu of a bond if you refuse to sign. In those instances, if you refuse to sign, and don't have a license, it's automatic jail.

Since signing doesn't admit guilt, why would you go through the trouble and hassle involved in not signing it?

2006-10-04 19:08:54 · answer #1 · answered by RJ 4 · 5 0

No and I really don't care if you don't sign it. Personally I won't even bother looking for reasons to give you another ticket or arrest you. You see, here is what happens, you are either (1) going to pay the ticket anyways or (2) when you contest the citation I will testify that you refused to sign and the Judge will see you as uncooperative and probably find you guilty just on general purpose. So, in the end, even when the disclaimer reads that you are not admitting guilt and only acknowledging that you received the ticket, is it really worth it to prove your point? As you can already see its no skin off my back.

2006-10-05 01:01:07 · answer #2 · answered by Judge Dredd 5 · 1 1

YES I WAS ARRESTED FOR NOT SIGNING. Two cops ran me off the road on a dark raining night and turned around to write a ticket to me claiming it was my fault. The mud tracks proved they ran me off the pavement and was proved in court, but I went to jail to post bail.
good luck

RJ . , Those 2 cops were out for trouble. This happened 200 ft. leaving a stop sign and they also wrote speeding, impossible in that P.U. as also proved. For 6 months the one cop hounded my home until the department decided he was an undesirable and was fired. I snapped photos of him driving on the sidewalk and across my driveway may have helped the cause. There are some, 'don't do as I do, do as I say', cops that make the majority look bad. I have never been arrested until then or since. I just refuse to tolerate people who think, in their own mind, that they are the King and everyone else shall bow to them. This is why I refused cooperation

2006-10-04 19:02:50 · answer #3 · answered by StayBeZe 4 · 3 0

In Virginia, you can be arrested for refusing to sign a citation.

2006-10-04 19:02:16 · answer #4 · answered by Pandagal 4 · 3 0

those are not elementary circumstances, truly. If that is the first written caution for my pal then i'd do this because I truly have received a written caution earlier for a first offense. If this pal has already received a written caution then I write the fee ticket. i visit teach regret, no longer some thing own yet i favor to do my job. I truly have charges to pay in simple terms like you. i visit inform her or him that they favor to be a safer motive force and they could keep away from those circumstances in the destiny. that's no longer confusing. It relies upon on the site visitors violation. If that's intense then arrest. If that's no longer intense then bypass with the warrant letter. i anticipate it quite is way less intense yet i don't understand. At any cost, for both easily a kind of circumstances, i'd bypass with what the branch needs. (what the regulation says)

2016-12-04 07:07:37 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes, but you can preserve your Constitutional rights by signing BELOW your signature the words "Without Prejudice". Below, meaning, Write the words WITHOUT PREJUDICE first, just above the area where the signature will go when you do sign the ticket.

Be sure that the ink in your signature goes OVER the ink of the words WITHOUT PREJUDICE so the judge will be on notice that you reserved your rights PRIOR to signing under duress or threat of being arrested if you did not sign the ticket. Hopes this helps.

2006-10-05 18:04:56 · answer #6 · answered by jeeveswantstoknow 2 · 0 0

Yes. By signing a citation you are giving your word that you will appear in court to plead your innocence or guilt in front of a judge. If you refuse to sign you are refusing to make that pledge and they can arrest you and hold you until your case is brought up before a judge.

2006-10-04 18:49:50 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 4 1

Absolutely. It is your promise to appear. If you refuse to sign, you are saying you won't appear in court. In that case, they will arrest you and make you appear in court.

CA vehicle code 40302:

40302. Whenever any person is arrested for any violation of this code, not declared to be a felony, the arrested person shall be taken
without unnecessary delay before a magistrate within the county in which the offense charged is alleged to have been committed and who
has jurisdiction of the offense and is nearest or most accessible with reference to the place where the arrest is made in any of the
following cases:
(a) When the person arrested fails to present his driver's license or other satisfactory evidence of his identity for examination.
(b) When the person arrested refuses to give his written promise to appear in court.
(c) When the person arrested demands an immediate appearance before a magistrate.
(d) When the person arrested is charged with violating Section 23152

2006-10-05 06:03:58 · answer #8 · answered by gunsandammoatwork 6 · 1 0

Yes you can be arrested for refusing to sign a ticket. It is an option. But why would you not want to sign a ticket. Your signature is only a promise to appear not an admittance of guilt.

2006-10-05 01:29:06 · answer #9 · answered by Barry DaLive 5 · 2 0

What state? A traffic citation is a misdemeanor and in some states that is a arrestable offense. So you could be arrested.

2006-10-05 00:44:46 · answer #10 · answered by Duhh 2 · 1 0

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