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How do I find that out? This is my first ticket ever since I started driving. (Since 2002).

2007-09-15 14:06:49 · 19 answers · asked by Flying Soldier 6 in Politics & Government Law Enforcement & Police

Right now I feel like, I will drive 5 MPH slower.

2007-09-15 14:07:18 · update #1

Police officer said that I can mail check or pay online.

2007-09-15 14:13:22 · update #2

19 answers

5 years without a ticket is pretty good.
Ask people who collect tickets.

17 miles an hour over the speed limit.

I don't know where you live. I'd recommend seeing an attorney who specializes in traffic tickets. There is one where I live and he gets you delayed adjudication, you take defensive driving and if you don't get any more tickets in a time interval it gets dropped. You also get a discount on your car insurance for taking defensive driving.

This attorney works by getting mass quantities of tickets processed, plea bargained and taken defensive driving. The city gets a lot of revenue in probation fee's.

A different attorney told me on tickets it's not worth the money to determine guilt or innocence it's a legal procedure.

Good Luck

2007-09-15 14:19:09 · answer #1 · answered by Will 4 · 0 1

Usually, 10MPH over the speed limit is one charege, and for every MPH over 10, the cost goes up.. I bet this is a 4 point ticket and at LEAST a couple hundred bucks. I bet it says you have to appear in court, then they'll let you know how much you owe them. If you were going 52 in a 35, and this is your first ticket, you are kissed by the Gods.. I'm sure this isn't the first time you did 52 in a 35. Thank your lucky stars it wasn't in a school or construction zone, or you'd be looking at more points, and double the fee..

2007-09-15 14:17:51 · answer #2 · answered by Bob Thompson 7 · 0 0

You should stick to doing just under or just at 10MPH over. If you go more than 10 over, you're asking for trouble. I'm surprised that you've not gotten ticked until now, since this is probably the way you drive all the time. That said, There's probably a number to call somewhere on the ticket, that or it will be determined after your court date, and you'll be notified. Short of that, look on the ticket to see what agency ticketed you (county, city, state,) and go to their website and find the FAQs page.. if they don't write the fine on the ticket, I'm sure they get this question a lot.

2007-09-16 05:07:02 · answer #3 · answered by Joe M 7 · 0 0

i might bypass to site visitors court docket in this one. 2 miles over the cost decrease is extraordinarily darn choosy. All speedometers are no longer precisely alike. There could be a version of as much as 5 or 6 MPH from automobile to automobile. through fact of this countless the time you will purely get carry of a citation for going extra beneficial than 7 MPH over the decrease. The law enforcement officers understand correct to the version. My rivalry is that 37 and 35 are one and an identical. combat this.

2016-10-09 06:16:14 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If it shows a 'bail' amount that would be the amount of the fine. It depends on where you live. In Los Angeles County you can go to the web site www.lasuperiorcourt.org and look up your tickets that haven't been paid yet. You can look them up by citation number or with your license number. You need to check the web for your area to see if there is anything equivalent.

2007-09-23 09:43:38 · answer #5 · answered by K C 1 · 0 0

You exceeded the speed limit by alot. It does not have an amount, because more then likely you will have to go to court for this ticket. Just call the phone number on the ticket and ask. How hard is that?

2007-09-15 14:11:55 · answer #6 · answered by Jeanne 2 · 0 0

You can go online to the court's website, go to pay traffic tickets bail section or whatever, enter your citation number and it will give you the bail amount. I got one for doing 45 in a 35 mph zone and it was about $180.00.

2007-09-15 14:12:13 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Only the judge can say, from what I know, or, there is a number on the back of most tickets to call them and ask.

2007-09-15 14:11:23 · answer #8 · answered by MsW 3 · 0 0

Your license should have been taken away, because this is what happens when your 15 over the speed-limit but then agian it varies from state to state. Go online and look-up your ticket.

2007-09-15 14:13:24 · answer #9 · answered by Audi11 3 · 0 0

Call the local municipal court/driving court, with the citation #
and your ID (drivers license) and they can quote you the cost.
If guilty, pay ahead of court date on citation and save the cost
of court. Otherwise pay ahead of court if innocent and avoid
the court cost and hostilities of a biased judge

2007-09-21 17:31:03 · answer #10 · answered by as4u2kis45 1 · 0 0

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