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HOW TO FIGHT A SPEEDING TICKET
HOW TO FIGHT A SPEEDING TICKET
You’ve been pulled over on what you
feel was a bogus speed trap. You’ve got this hugely expensive
speeding ticket for trickling a few miles over the speed limit. You
feel the officer used excessive tactics in singling you out of the
crowd of speed demons out on the Interstate. You feel maybe even it
was your own good driving that got you pulled over as you were the
easiest catch! You’ve pleaded your case to the officer as well as
family and friends. Now what are you going to do about it? Fighting speeding tickets is a
ritual as old as time and can be perhaps even more fun. As we
cautiously parry forward into the ere looming technology age that’s
already consumed us; an age which threatens to take our traditions
and rituals, chew them up, and spit them out, leaving a confused and
pensive populous lurching for answers; there are still some things
that will remain (at least for now). Fighting speeding tickets is
one of those things. There are a few ways that are effective and
may leave you waving to the retreating officer as they continue on
for their next victim. You most definitely have a right to fight; as
well you should, if you feel you were wronged. The examples I used
above are all very valid reasoning’s for being wrongly accused;
unfortunately for you, the wheels of justice grind slowly and often
what people opt for; rather than going off and fighting this
wrongness; is they just send their check and curse themselves. Rather than letting any of these grievances
befall you, you should take positive steps to beat the ticket, beat
the man, beat the system. If you’ve missed that opportunity, but remember the event vividly, write it out. Include a short, terse, factual letter with your claim of innocence and you may be granted lieneny with only defending your case on the one side. Just remember, you’re asking for something from them. So be respectful, be gracious, and consider yourself blessed if you’re able to avoid the final step: Going into court! This is the last option; one people usually balk at for all sorts of reasons: civil court is slow, your case might not be heard, I don’t have all this time off to go and fight this stupid ticket. But, if you believe in your case, it’s a step we all should be prepared to take. Fighting speeding tickets is a multi level attack; always remain on guard, look for loopholes, remember you position. But when that letter arrives and you tear it open “Charges DROPPED” there is no other feeling in the world to compare.
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