The wrong date does not invalidate the ticket. Most police agencies have an employee who enters ticket into an automated system and, in the process of doing so, finds those errors. The agency will then send you a "cite correction letter" that explains and corrects the error.
Even if the agency does not do so, the generally accepted rules of the courts say that a minor error such as a date or time error, spelling error, error in vehicle color, etc., will not invalidate a citation.
Here is my personal experience with these kinds of situations. I once dated a ticket a year back from the actual date of the offense. I wrote that the incident occurred on in January of 2005 when the incident actually occurred in January of 2006. When the ticket went to court the person who received the citation tried to make a big deal of this error. My response - Sorry, I made a mistake on the date. That was as far as it went and they were convicted.
2006-11-24 18:34:28
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answer #1
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answered by James P 4
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With much consideration and contemplation I have come up with the inevitable answer to your perplexing question...no. Just go pay your fine and be done with it. We all make mistakes. I'm sure your speeding was a mistake, and I'm sure the cop putting the wrong year on the ticket was a mistake, and two mistakes don't make everything OK.
2006-11-24 18:22:49
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answer #2
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answered by gablueliner 3
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First, it does seem that you've been charged for this reason, in spite of the indisputable fact that in the experience that your vehicle became not seen for any length of time, then you definitely ought to not were stated with a cost ticket. I’m not particular that you'll have the right to confirm the radar, even although that it ought to seem that there must be no clarification for withholding that from you. The structure states that you've the right to face your accusers. i will provide my suggestion, yet earlier I do i ought to ask your self why you ought to pay a legal professional $1000. This does make it seem that you've been to blame of the infraction or why ought to you pay that? think about had a court docket appointed legal professional to signify you in case you've been threat free. i can't choose you because it isn't my position to attempt this and that i take position to believe your situation. Now my suggestion. Write to the Governor of your state and tell him/her what you said in what you informed me. The Governor of a state does not ought to skill of pardon, yet relies upon on a board of Clemency, it rather is composed of four contributors. clarify your situation and ask for a pardon by way of overwhelming preponderance of the information that the officer who stated you probably did not have clean and continuation of your vehicle. A citation must have clean and concise information of the vehicle it rather is being stated. If the officer lost eye contact with your vehicle for even a second, then you definitely ought to not be stated for against the law. in case you're taking this step, that's one which maximum folk do not do. hence, your case will be seen because not many people move to that difficulty. in spite of the indisputable fact that, the testimony of the officer who gave you the cost ticket may be seen, yet when he's truthful and lower than oath, he ought to assert that he overpassed your vehicle, that can advise that it may not were your vehicle that he used the radar on. in this charm, you ought to likely win, yet you're out your $1000. Your legal professional became slack as i ought to have extra powerful represented you.
2016-11-26 21:07:36
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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no, or when you appear, they can merely re-issue you a new ticket ( the statute of limitation would not have run out)
Minor typo on tickets ( which are just summons) has little effect on the courts upholding them. They are merely the documnet that forces you to appear in court, paying the fine is a option sometimes, in which you are pleading guilty without having to appear
2006-11-24 21:43:26
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Doubtful. But here's an idea. Why don't you take full responsibility for what you did and pay the ticket. Just a thought.
2006-11-24 18:17:58
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answer #5
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answered by dawnsdad 6
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Stop being like grown-ups and just admit when you are wrong , I see so many women driving their SUVs and sucking down a Double Moca Java Latte Grande with a dab of European cream and 14.6 miligrams of imported cinamon and .567 miligrams of imported Danish raw sugar served in a 100% re-cycled paper cup. Constantly disobeying the law while driving.
2006-11-24 18:44:41
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answer #6
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answered by caciansf 4
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How did you notice the wrong numbers on the ticket and not notice the numbers on the speed limit sign?
2006-11-24 18:34:47
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answer #7
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answered by madchurchil 1
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Actually, this is a technicality. In most jurisdictions you'd win by technicality.
Do some research in for laws in your area. Chances are you will get off if you plead your case.
In the court of law, do not admit guilt. Argue that you did not drive on the date the ticket was issued. Show proof.
Good luck.
2006-11-24 18:20:30
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answer #8
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answered by deni m 1
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If we get tickets we always go to court and get them reduced. It might pay if you don't have to take a day off work to do it. We go to night court and always end up paying less.
2006-11-24 19:16:32
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answer #9
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answered by Lake Lover 6
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No mate, good try though. They will hand it in at the end of the day and they are all checked on a computer system. It will get sent back to him and he will have to correct it, but you still have to pay it.
2006-11-24 19:03:26
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answer #10
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answered by N. Andrews 2
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