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I have a relative that got pulled over for speeding and no seatbelt. the officer wrote on the ticket that driving school was an option and when the pymt was sent in to the court it came back saying the officer had made a mistake on the ticket. If we go to court can the ticket get dismissed for error on part of the officer?

2007-03-06 15:54:10 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Law Enforcement & Police

9 answers

No, that error was not material to to crime your relative was charged with.

2007-03-06 17:06:13 · answer #1 · answered by zebj25 6 · 2 0

Was the mistake the driving school option?? If so, the ticket will not be dismissed. That is just an administrative error, which the court corrected by notifying you.

I once wrote a speeding citation to a driver for doing 45mph in a 30mph zone at the intersection of "B" Street and Main Street.

I had meant to write "A" Street which is in a 30mph zone; "B" Street is in a 45mph zone. The judge dismissed the citation. I had made a factual error on the ticket. Errors like that get tickets dismissed, not the wrong fine or a misspelled word.

2007-03-06 18:50:35 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

Being that call 37 below New Jersey Statutes covers marriage and married persons I doubt that the choose will agree that the officer meant a 7 somewhat of a 9. this is call 39 it extremely is the site visitors code for the state. you are able to attempt yet maximum choose's are not going to be that sympathetic, quite on the grounds which you gained 6 different tickets.

2016-10-17 11:13:40 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

If you can prove there is a mistake and normally the mistake could be a digit off as an example; the judge should dismiss your ticket. Remember to be very tactful with the judge because at the end it is up to the judge.

2007-03-14 15:02:00 · answer #4 · answered by Abby 4 · 0 0

It depends- if it's a major mistake like saying you commited a crime completely unrelated to the incident, ie the ticketing officer put the wrong criminal code on the ticket- I'm pretty sure it gets dismissed

2007-03-06 16:02:51 · answer #5 · answered by actuatedtendancy 2 · 0 0

Well was your relative speeding and not wearing his seat belt? If yes, and he admitted to it, then no. The mistake was that the officer believed that driving school was an option, that has nothing to do with the crime. I wish people would take responsibility for their actions instead of looking for quick fixes and always blaming other people. Tell your relative to suck it up!

2007-03-11 14:25:10 · answer #6 · answered by Rhode Island Red 5 · 1 0

If certain info is wrong, I think you can. For example the wrong location of where the offense occured.

2007-03-06 23:48:46 · answer #7 · answered by WC 7 · 0 0

just pay the fine,you would be spending more time and money fighting it

2007-03-10 13:45:18 · answer #8 · answered by Norweiginwood420 3 · 0 0

its up to the judge.

2007-03-13 08:07:09 · answer #9 · answered by J 4 · 0 0

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