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I received a speeding ticket in Tifton County/GA for driving 28 above the speed limit on I75 on 11/27, I was retunring home after a Thanksgiving break at Orlando :(...Does someone have a sample letter for pleading not guilty ?..the fine is too high in this county (for speeds >90 the fine is $700)...please advise....thanks!

2006-12-03 15:15:26 · 5 answers · asked by am_i_the_ONE 1 in Politics & Government Law Enforcement & Police

5 answers

time for you to start learning how to fight the ticket.
The Tipmra is Trial by Ambush. You challenge the evidence by making essential to the prosecution something they should have, but can not produce in court at your trial. You catch the prosecution unprepared. Unethical yes, illegal NO, but fatal to the prosecutions case against you.

You can read from your notes in court. You can read the questions and the motions. You do not have to memorize anything. Your notes in court are protected as "Work Product". The prosecution may not ask to see your notes and if they do, tell them to go to a hot place down under reserved for lawyers and Politicians

2006-12-03 16:17:50 · answer #1 · answered by deesnuts 5 · 0 1

You're screwed. If the speed limit is 65, the speed limit is 65. There is not excuse for going 93 in a 65. Pay the fine.

2006-12-04 18:53:30 · answer #2 · answered by SeahawkFan37 5 · 0 0

Traffic from Macon to the state line tends to be real heavy and theres a lot of construction down there too. You're lucky you didn't kill someone or hurt them real bad. 93 in a 65? Pay the man and slow down!

2006-12-03 23:41:14 · answer #3 · answered by Norman 7 · 2 0

If you can't pay the fine, drive the speed limit. You ARE guilty & if they have you on radar what good will a not guilty plea do??? All it takes is ONE little thing to go wrong & you can lose control & kill yourself or worse, kill another person or persons....

2006-12-03 23:37:23 · answer #4 · answered by More Lies & More Smoke Screens 6 · 0 1

If you can, request a court date and make a request to the judge to lower the fine. 9 out of 10 times they will. Bring documentation of the hardship for paying that fine. You can also hire an attorney in that area that can take care of that for you for a minimal fee.

2006-12-03 23:32:07 · answer #5 · answered by Cpl Coop 2 · 0 2

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