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INTRODUCTION
The most important aspect to
consider in avoiding a traffic ticket is to be aware of where you
are in the current traffic pattern.
Many people will tend to
slow down for the first two days after receiving a ticket. But a
lot of people don’t. This chapter is designed to assist you
in keeping out of trouble in the future.
Make sure that you are driving
the proper type of car. If you’ve got a really brightly
colored car such as a red sports car, it looks like it’s
doing a hundred miles an hour even when it is standing still.
There are a great number
of quality fast vehicles that don’t draw as much attention.
In order to be safe in any case, make sure that you have the
proper electronic equipment to protect you from any further
ticketing. Make sure that you are aware of your situation on the
road.
Be alert at all times.
Keep your eyes on the on ramps on the major highways, because
they are a favorite spot for the Police. Try not to come up on a
hill at 80 to 90 miles an hour because you have no way of seeing
what’s over the hill and if there is a patrol car there
with a radar unit, you’re going to be nailed before you
even see him.
Be on the alert for any hiding
places that a patrol car may be, behind trees, around bends, or
even in front of a large truck that’s driving in the right
hand lane. That truck is going the speed limit because there’s
usually a patrol car right in front of him, waiting for you to
pass.
Try to keep your driving in the
right hand lane as often as possible. The police know that
speeders are in the left hand lane, so make your pass in the left
and get back into the right hand lane as soon as possible. Try
not to weave through traffic because you will draw attention to
yourself. The patrol people will stop you for reckless driving as
well as speeding. That could be double the problem. Keep your eye
on your rearview mirror, especially at night, for any car that
may be approaching from the rear very quickly. If you’re
cruising at 75 or 80 miles an hour down the highway and a car is
creeping up on you, it’s entirely possible that it’s
a patrol car doing a "Paced Speeding Ticket," or it’s
another speeder who can act as a "Rabbit." A "Rabbit"
will be explained shortly.
Occasionally as you’re
driving down the highway, you will be passed by someone that we
will refer to as a "Rabbit". You should have no problem
following this rabbit at a reasonable distance, a quarter mile or
so, because they will act as a target for the radar trap and will
get stopped prior to you even arriving at the scene. Just don’t
forget about your rearview mirror because the patrol car may have
spotted him from the distance and is going to follow behind you
to try and overtake him. And he could get to you first.
Make sure that you keep an eye
on what cars are parked on the side of the road, regardless of
their make, model, or color. If it’s not a police car, or
an unmarked car, it could be another motorist in trouble, or it
could be somebody who’s just about to pull onto the
highway. Be ready to move out of their way.
Know where you are at all
times. It can be your best defense in avoiding a speeding ticket.
JAMMERS AND DETECTORS
A radar detector is a very
important piece of equipment which will allow you to stay one
step ahead of the traffic officer. First off, you need to know
that radar detectors are illegal in Virginia and the District of
Columbia. In those two areas of the countries, anyone who has a
radar detector accessible to the driver or the passenger with
available power is facing a $300 fine in the District of
Columbia, and between $25 and $100 in Virginia.
You may have the other
consideration that police in those areas will probably confiscate
the evidence until your trial. Radar and laser detectors are not
legal ANYWHERE in this country for commercial vehicle drivers.
Remember that a radar detector does not make you invincible. You
are still subject to the laws of this country, and a patrol
officer usually will not give a warning to someone if they have a
radar detector. The detector however, is your best defense
against getting a ticket.
Radar detectors are changing on
a weekly to monthly basis nowadays, and being upgraded
periodically. They are getting better. When shopping for a radar
detector, there are several factors that you should consider.
First, get the widest range of detection that you possibly can,
and try to include XK and Ka bands. Have different indicators for
each one of these bands. A separate light or sound for each. Make
sure that the unit has a good visual display and either a mute or
volume button so that you can adjust it according to the ambient
sounds in your vehicle. Try to find a unit that has at least a
hundred and ten decibels (dB) sensitivity. And remember that the
most expensive unit is not always the best. Your unit should be
mounted on your windshield in a high position, near the vicinity
of your rearview mirror. This gives you the widest possible
detection range. Use your detector at all times. It’s not
just for that long trip, or for highway driving. A speed trap can
be set up in the city just a block or two from your home, so be
prepared for any eventuality.
One nice thing about keeping
your radar detector on in the city is that the more traffic there
is, the more often the police officer has to activate his unit.
Every time he activates his unit you should be able to know that
he is around. Police officers nowadays are moving more and more
to the instant on type of radar detector. Using this piece of
equipment, the officer just has to pull this trigger when you’re
in sight and he gets an instant reading on what your speed is. He
feels that this is accurate, but we’ll show you later as
you read on in this manual that there are some pitfalls with this
method.
If you do get caught in an
instant on situation, don’t slam on the brakes. You can
take your foot off the accelerator and decelerate slowly. If the
officer notices that you are screeching to a halt he’ll
know that you’ve been speeding. And he’s got you!
He’ll also know that you have a detector and if you’re
in one of these areas of the country where it is not permitted,
he’s got you for that ticket also.
The most important
consideration is the fact that you should get a good radar
detector, place it high up on your windshield, and use it at all
times. The benefits of the utilization of your radar detector
will be far greater than any of the subsequent pitfalls that may
occur.
JAMMERS
There are two types of jammers
available on the market today. Passive and Active. There are two
main areas of differences in these two types. Passive jammers are
legal because they do not transmit any radio frequencies, and
active jammers do transmit and are quite illegal.
Lets look at these two types a
little bit more. The bottom line on passive jammers is, don’t
waste your time or your money with them. They are not going to be
as effective as an active jammers. Take money that you would have
spent and get a good detector. Get one that you feel will work as
advertised.
Active jammers transmit, they
work, and they are illegal. If you are transmitting a radio beam
you must have an FCC license. Your police departments and your
local townships are licensed, but the officers don’t
actually need to be individually licensed. The radar units that
police are using can tell when they are being jammed. Imagine
racing down a highway and you’re doing 85 to 90 and your
jammer is showing a steady 35 to 40 to the officer in his unit.
The officer knows that you’re speeding. He knows that
you’re jamming him. You are obstructing justice and
breaking the law at the same time. Are you getting the feeling
that perhaps your speeding ticket will be a lot less important to
him than all the other laws you’re breaking at the same
time?
Laser detectors are legal.
Since laser is a form of a light beam and not a radio frequency.
One good investment for your car would be a laser license plate
cover. The police generally aim for your license plate since that
is an excellent reflector for their radar unit. Usually your
license plate is white and it is highly reflective, giving them a
good readout. You can typically buy one of these laser plate
covers for about $30.
WHAT DO I DO WHEN I’M
STOPPED?
Regardless of how good your
efforts are in trying to avoid a ticket, one of these days the
boys in blue are going to get you. You’re going to look in
your rearview mirror, you’re going to see the flashing
lights, and what you do in the next very few minutes may be a
tremendous determining factor in whether or not you beat the
ticket. Pull off to the side of the road as far as is possible to
allow the officer to approach your vehicle after he pulls up
behind you. Try not to do anything that might be out of the
ordinary, or to make your appearance before the officer,
memorable. You don’t want him to remember you. That way, if
any specific details are asked in court later, he’ll have
no idea and it may blow his credibility in front of the Judge.
Once your car is safely pulled off the side of the road shut the
engine off, roll your window down, and keep both hands on the
wheel. DO NOT remove your seat belt at this time. If you’re
not wearing your belt, it’s too late to put it on. Don’t
bother.
If it’s during the
evening or darkness hours, make sure that you have your flashing
lights on. Relax, calm yourself, and wait for the officer to
approach your vehicle. If you get upset now, you’ll cause
undue attention to yourself, and you certainly do not want to do
that. Generally, an officer will ask you one of two questions.
It’s either, "Do you know how fast you were going?",
and your response should be, "No, I’m not really
sure." Or, "I think I was doing the speed limit."
Or, "I know I wasn’t speeding, I looked at my
speedometer right before you stopped me." The other question
that you may be asked is, "Do you know why you were
stopped?" Your response is, "No Officer, I don’t."
The most important factor to consider at this point is, DO NOT
ADMIT ANYTHING. Your Constitutional rights allow you to remain
silent, but the officer doesn’t have to let you know that.
If you tell the officer you were doing about 62 or 63 and you
know that you’re in a 50 mile speed limit, you’ve
admitted your guilt.
When the officer requests your
credentials such as driver license, insurance, and registration,
tell him where they are located in the car and ask for permission
to retrieve them before going for them. This will relieve the
officer’s suspicion that there may be a concealed weapon in
the car. If the officer decides that he wants to search your
vehicle do not agree to this search under any circumstances. If
he says that he’ll get a search warrant, tell him to go and
get one. He cannot search your vehicle without one. He must have
probable cause to search your vehicle. If he can smell smoke from
Marijuana or alcohol, he has probable cause. And those are things
that are more important right now to you than the speeding ticket
you’re about to get. This is not the time to try to argue
with the officer, or see if you can beat the ticket. Give him as
little as possible to remember you by because he’s heard of
all of the excuses hundreds of times before. Once he starts
writing that ticket, you’re going to get it, period.
There’s no turning back for the officer or for you. He
can’t void it and say he made a mistake. He’s got to
write it. And it’s yours.
While the officer is writing
your ticket back at his vehicle, look over your surroundings and
make notes of as much data as you possibly can. Small details can
be very important. Some of the information that you should be on
the lookout for is the type of vehicle, the license plate, and
the unit number of the police officer’s car that stopped
you. Know the exact location of where you were stopped, and the
distance between where you were stopped and where the violation
occurred.
Write down the weather
conditions. Cloud cover, rain, no rain, sunny, overcast, snow,
whatever it may be. Write down a list of anyone who’s
traveling with you in your vehicle and please ask them to remain
quiet during the entire time that you are with the officer,
unless they are asked a question by the officer. Write down the
color and the type of clothing that you are wearing. Make note of
any noticeable characteristics of your vehicle. Different colors
of paint, dents, aluminum wheels, hubcaps, anything that are
small details which would be difficult for the officer to
remember later. Make sure you try to remember everything the
officer says during the traffic stop. If he has to talk on his
radio, or direct another driver during the stop, make a note of
that. Many times the person who’s writing the ticket is not
the one who is using the radar unit. He’s basically the
chase car. Find out if he’s the one because it’s very
important to your case that you know if the officer was the one
using the radar unit. Observe the traffic in the area during your
stop and remember what the traffic was like when you were pulled
over. If you can, remember everything humanly possible about the
cars in your area during your stop.
After the officer writes your
citation he will bring it back to you and ask you to sign. By
signing you are merely acknowledging receipt of the citation. At
that point in time, ask the officer if you can have your court
appearance moved to the county seat. If he refuses, please have
him indicate on the back of the ticket that he refused to allow
you this consideration. If he does not want to indicate that on
the back of the ticket, don’t worry about it, just make a
note of it in your notes. It may be important later on. Tell the
officer after you have signed the citation that you would like to
see the readout on the radar. He’s not really required to
do this for you because it would involve your safety. They would
not like to see you run down by another motorist while you are
walking back to the patrol car. If he does allow you to see the
radar, don’t make any comments at all. Just make a note of
who manufactured the unit or a model number. At this point in
time, don’t mention the calibration fork. We’ll
explain that later on in the book, but don’t ask to see it.
If the officer knows that you are aware of the calibration fork,
it would tell him that you know a bit more about the type of
equipment that he’s using, and he’ll remember you in
court. And that’s not going to help you later on down the
road. After the officer returns to his patrol car, stay there for
another one or two minutes and jot down any other notes that may
come into your head at the time. The officer will usually be
making notes on the back of the ticket so that he can recall them
later on in court. Don’t stay too long at the scene because
that will be memorable to the officer and you don’t want
him to remember any aspects of this particular traffic stop.
You’ve got plenty of time to prepare your case between now
and the time your set to appear in court. All of the information
is available to you twenty four hours a day. When you leave the
scene of the citation, pull away safely. Don’t spin your
tires, don’t send rocks up into the air or a cloud of dust.
Go out with the confidence that you probably will never see the
officer again.
There’s also the extreme
possibility that the next time you see the officer, he’s
going to be in a courtroom, under oath, answering your questions.
If you follow the directions previously noted, you are just going
to be another face in the crowd out of the hundreds of citations
he wrote in the past month. There’s a good chance that he
won’t remember you, and he certainly won’t remember
what color shirt you had on, or what the weather condition was
like.
FIGHTING, PLEA BARGAINING, OR
PAYING THE FINE
This book is designed to show
you that there’s only one choice in the three options that
are available to you.... FIGHT THE TICKET. Even if you go to
court and lose, your fines still will be no higher than they
would be if you did not contest it. The important aspect to
consider is that your insurance premiums are going to go up for
years. This will be far greater than the amount of your ticket.
HOW SHOULD I PLEAD?
There are four types of
pleading available to you that you can enter for your ticket.
Guilty. I made a mistake,
here’s my money, raise my insurance.
Guilty with an explanation. I
made a mistake, but let me tell you why, before I give you my
money, and you raise my insurance.
NoloContender. It’s the
Latin translation for "No Contest". All right I’m
guilty, but I just don’t want to tell you. Here’s my
money, raise my insurance."
NOT Guilty. This is what you
should be interested in.
Not guilty does not necessarily
mean that you did not commit the crime. All it means is that the
Prosecutor now has to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that you
DID commit the crime. The Prosecution has the burden of proof,
not you. If the citing officer does not show up for the trial,
that’s not your problem, it’s the prosecution’s.
All you have to do is, enter a simple motion to dismiss due to
the lack of prosecution’s witness.
DO YOU NEED A LAWYER?
You’re only going to need
a lawyer if jail time is possible with your sentence. Some of the
citations that could involve jail time would be a DUI or a DWI.
Driving a vehicle on a suspended license, an accident involving a
hit and run, or if a felony was committed while you were using
your vehicle. Drug or weapon possession, robbery, manslaughter,
hit and run, anything along those lines. If your case involves
any of these points, a lawyer is definitely recommended. If not,
figure out the cost of the attorney’s fees and weigh them
against the fine and how much you’ll be paying in insurance
premiums. Some attorneys specializing in traffic tickets will
charge between fifty and one hundred dollars for their services.
You may be able to plea bargain for a driving school
certification in lieu of a larger fine.
You really can’t handle
the above without the use of an attorney. Secure one for these
purposes. Most attorneys have a pretty good relationship with
prosecutors, and they know their way around the court system far
better than you possibly can. If you feel that the pricing is
okay, and the services that you will be retaining will assist you
in making a good settlement, consider one of these people and
utilize their specialties to help you out, simply because it’s
easier on you in the long run.
Once you hire an attorney, you
have lost control over how your case will be handled because he
will be the one taking care of it for you. However, you do gain
the advantage of his knowledge of the legal procedures and you’re
the one with the most detail as to the events surrounding the
particular citation.
Industry statistics states that
if you do testify on your own behalf and you ultimately convict
yourself by stating the wrong thing, about 9/10ths of all traffic
cases would not have benefited from use of an attorney.
DRIVING SCHOOL
One of the most popular forms
of plea bargaining available to you is referred to as driving
school or, another variation of the same thing. You, the
Defendant agree to attend a driving school and they provide a
completion certificate from a school that’s licensed in you
local jurisdiction. If you attend and pass, the charges against
you will be dropped. Usually you’re allowed to participate
in this program, once yearly. Sometimes you can get a discount on
your car insurance by mentioning that you have successfully
completed driving school. Just don’t tell them that you
went because of a speeding ticket. Usually, this is the most
painless way to get rid of the charges that are against you.
Driving schools normally cost $35 to $50 to attend. It’s
possible that a court cost will also be included or added to this
fee. Usually, the total cost will be less than your speeding
fine. You might want to consider this possibility, if you feel
that your case is weak and you may not have a chance of winning.
If you’ve got a good case built up, save the option of the
driving school for another time when you may need it.
SPEED DEFENSE
Speed defense implies that your
need to speed was a determining factor in protecting yourself.
Perhaps you were doing 55 in a zone where everyone else was doing
70, and in order to avoid the potential of an accident, you had
to accelerate to match the speed of the surrounding traffic.
You might also have a tail
gater behind you who is coming up rather quickly and you had to
accelerate to get out of their way, in order to protect yourself.
These defenses don’t usually work. Don’t feel that
your case will be dismissed simply on the evidence that you may
present about these particular situations. It’s not a good
option for you to pursue this type of defense.
There are some areas in New
York State that give you an unusual opportunity to beat your
speeding ticket. The cities of Albany, Buffalo, Rochester, and
New York City are four of these cities that give you the
opportunity that we were speaking about earlier. In general, if
you receive a ticket in those cities, there is no way of fighting
it. You don’t get to see a real Judge, you don’t get
a chance to appeal, you can’t plea bargain, and you don’t
have any right to discovery. The courts are required by law to
maintain a 65% success rate on convictions in order to maintain
the revenues. The only good part of this whole system is that
since you won’t be seeing a Judge, but rather an
Administrative individual, they don’t have the power to put
you in jail. Your only hope for success in this type of situation
is to continue to postpone your appearance as many times as
possible and hope that the officer who issued the speeding
citation does not show up on the appearance date. That’s
the only way you can possibly manage to win in a situation like
this. The system is legal, it’s constitutional, and efforts
to change this system have been vetoed by the Governors for
years. Simply because they know that it generates a lot of cash
flow. Just try not to get a ticket in any of these locations.
PLAN AHEAD
Since we have now determined
that you are going to take your case to court, there are a few
things that you should prepare for your defense. Some of these
items are:
Call your auto insurance
agency, find out how much your premiums will be affected by being
convicted on the ticket that you have received.
Check with Motor Vehicles and
see how many points you have on your license, and how many your
possible conviction may add to that.
Make sure that the registration
is up to date, your insurance is up to date, inspections, etc.
Take care of them before you walk into court. If you have any
outstanding tickets, take care of them before your trial.
Find out if you’re
eligible for a driving school.
Check your work schedule to see
if you have any conflicts that may facilitate changing your court
date. Once you’ve taken care of all these matters, or, if
they are in the process of being taken care of, it’s time
to prepare your defense.
SET THE COURT DATE
First thing to consider is
entering a plea and try to set a trial date. Here are three ways
to enter your plea with the traffic court. First, going to the
County Clerk’s office to request a trial date in person.
Secondly, stand before the Judge, enter your "not guilty"
plea and then ask for a trial date. Third, mail a copy of your
citation and request a trial date.
There’s a possibility
with all three of these approaches that you will have to post
bail in the amount of the citation. Check with the court in
advance to find out, so that you do have the proper amount should
it be required. After you have posted bail, if it’s
required, you’ve got two things that are going for you.
First, you’ve paid your fine already. If you lose your
case, your fines paid and it’s not going to cost you any
more money. Second, if you can’t make it to your trial and
they forfeit your bail, there will be no additional fees. But if
you don’t post bail, and don’t appear for your trial,
a warrant can be issued for your arrest for failing to appear.
Now instead of just a simple traffic citation, you’ve got a
misdemeanor charge pending against you. Don’t let something
simple get complicated by not showing up at your trial.
You are guaranteed by the
constitution to a fair and speedy trial. That means that within
45 days of the day that you entered your plea, you should be
attending your trial. Watch this time very carefully. If anyone
contacts you about changing the date of your trial, you are going
to have to waive your right to a speedy trial. The only thing in
your favor is that the longer the trial date is from the actual
date that you got your ticket, the better the odds are that the
officer who wrote the ticket will not be able to remember the
details. The disadvantages include the fact that the court can
pick any date it chooses within the forty five day time frame. It
could be that you are not available on that day and you could
forfeit your bail and the whole trial. You may have to prepare
for your trial at a faster pace if it’s less than the 45
days that you would normally allocate. Also the details would be
clearer in the officers mind than you might want them to be. If
you can’t get ready for a trial in 30 days, you’re
probably not going to be ready in sixty anyway. Your best bet is
that the officer does not appear at all. The most important thing
to consider is the fact that you don’t want to waive your
rights to a speedy trial.
Another little trick to
remember when you’re trying to set your trial date is to
find out when the officer’s vacation time is due. Usually
this time is extended as a courtesy to the court, but you can
usually use it to your advantage. If you know the officer’s
vacation time, pick a day right in the middle of his time off and
try to make your court appearance to request your trial date
about 40 days previous to that. Make sure that you skip over
holidays and it doesn’t include a weekend. If you follow
these guidelines, try to use a day that you select as your date
to appear to enter your not guilty plea and request a trial. This
scenario depends upon two criteria, one that includes the
officer’s vacation dates, and secondly that you are able to
walk into the Clerk’s office and enter your plea. At this
point, it’s time for you to wait for your trial date to be
set. Usually it’s somewhere around 40 days after you’ve
entered your first plea, in most cases. You should be able to
enter the courtroom right while the officer who wrote the
citation is enjoying his vacation. This doesn’t happen in
most cases. Usually the courts notice the error and they try to
schedule a date for you. Under no circumstances should you waive
your 45 day right to speedy trial. If they reschedule your trial
without your consent and it’s more than 45 days from the
date that you appeared in court originally, you have an excellent
chance for a mistrial. Go to your local library, research the
case laws. Try to find out if an officers vacation time is not
good cause for continuance of your trial. This will give you some
counter measures if the Prosecutor attempts to claim that the
court did have good cause to continue your trial. Just tell them
what you found out in your reading, and make a motion for a
mistrial. If you’re overruled, just go on with your case
and file an appeal if you’re found guilty. Usually the case
will be overturned on an appeal. Now that you’ve entered
your not guilty plea and you’ve gotten the court moving,
it’s time to put all of all your facts together and build
your defense.
DMV
Every state has a division of
Motor Vehicles. Their job is to control all facets of your
privilege to drive a motor vehicle. They are able to monitor your
driving record and decide when and if it is necessary to suspend
your privileges. Usually they use points to determine whether or
not you have committed enough violations to suspend your license.
If you do accumulate enough points, you may have your license
suspended and you may not be unable to operate a motor vehicle
during that period of time. Some states will keep the violation
records on your license for five years. Most states leave a DUI
or a DWI on your record for seven years. When you’re
preparing the defense for your trial, make sure to check on your
driving record. You might also like to have a list of all the
different points that can be earned on you license. Most of the
DMV’s will be able to provide you with that record on your
license for nominal fee. Lets hope that you will not be facing a
potential suspension of your license for this current driving
infraction. If you are, it might be a good idea to retain an
attorney. If your situation falls in the norm, you’ll
probably be safe from suspension but you may still have a mark on
your license for three years from the date of conviction and that
will increase your insurance premiums.
YOUR BASIC RIGHTS
If you’ve entered into a
courtroom prior to today, you know that they are rather
impressive and they leave no doubt in your mind who is in charge.
Regardless of that fact you are still entitled to certain rights.
Unfortunately your rights may be overlooked in court, in an
effort to get you to plead guilty so that the court gets your
money. Be aware of your rights as you are approaching the date of
your trial. Make sure to remember the following rights and keep
them in your mind as you enter into the courtroom.
*You are entitled to a speedy
trial.
*You may request and are
entitled to a court trial. Usually the only ruling body is the
Judge. You may have the option in some states to request a jury.
You’ll probably have better luck with a Judge than a jury
of your peers in most cases.
*You are entitled to the use of
an attorney. In traffic court you will usually have to pay for
this service, you won’t get one for free unless your
offense could be subject to jail time.
*Do not attempt to subpoena the
officer who was riding along in the police car when you were
stopped. The only thing that would be of interest to you are
documents listed in the public records in discovery sections here
previously.
*Any witnesses brought into
court are subject to cross examination by you. Usually it would
be the officer who wrote the ticket. That’s why if the
officer does not show up, there’s no case against you and
no conviction.
*You have the right to remain
silent. Don’t ever forget this as you go into the
courtroom. You never have to testify against yourself and try not
to take the stand for the defense.
Later on in this manual you’ll
see how important these rights are to assist you in fighting your
cause. Make a note of them and keep them handy so that you’ll
be reminded of them during the course of the trial.
REQUEST PUBLIC RECORDS
This area is important for
several reasons. First of all, look up the actual violation that
you were charged with. Be aware of how it’s worded and any
relevant laws that may pertain to that particular code. You might
need to access the public records provisions to obtain necessary
documentation to help you prepare your defense. You can either go
to your local library or a local Law library. Try to look at the
different case laws that relate to your particular violation and
copy down any references that support your potential defense.
Presume that you are going to prosecute your own case, and write
down any laws that you would use. I shall take an example from
the California Motor vehicle code to illustrate what the
prosecution will need to prove in order to get a conviction
against you. The traffic violation code that we shall use is
CVC22350 Unsafe Speed. "No person shall drive a vehicle (you
have to be identified as the driver and the witness for the
prosecution needs to have observed you actually driving the
vehicle) upon a highway." (The prosecution has to establish
where the violation occurred). "At a speed greater than is
reasonable or prudent." What do you consider reasonable or
prudent? It’s merely someone’s opinion. "Having
due regard for weather visibility, the traffic on and the surface
and width of the highway." These are the factors used to
establish reasonable and prudent issues "and in no event at
a speed which endangers safety of a person or property." Are
you guilty of endangering the person or of endangering someone’s
property? Try to break down the codes into bits and pieces that
you can manage and figure out all the points that the prosecution
needs to prove against you. If he does not prove all these
points, you have grounds for dismissal after they rest their
case.
DISCOVER
One of the rights of the
defendant as part of the trial is the discovery process. Some
states try to limit this right in traffic cases. The reason is
they want you to pay your fine and go home. Try to remember that
it is your constitutional right for utilization of the discovery
process. You are going to find a list of the items you need, how
to write your request, and who to send it to under the Public
Records Request. Talk to your local county clerks office and find
out how to issue a discovery subpoena. Make sure that you
indicate that any items on the discovery subpoena are necessary
prior to the trial date. The items you might normally need for a
radar speeding ticket are the following; repair records,
manufacturers manual and specifications, a log of the
calibrations, and a copy of the departments FCC license to
operate a radar unit, a copy of the repair calibration, and
accuracy of the tuning fork. The arrest record of the police
officer for three months prior to the date of your offense. His
log for the day of your citation. Both copies of your original
citation. A speedometer calibration certificate, all the
maintenance and the repair records and the service records for
the patrol car that was used in stopping you for your violation.
Please be aware that the prosecution can stop this request with a
motion to protect. Don’t let that bother you because if
this occurs just appear at your trial and make a motion to
dismiss the charges. It might work, it might not. If it doesn’t
work, ask what the prosecution is trying to hide by denying you
the information that you need to build your case. Immediately
after that, file for a motion for continuance to give you enough
time to get your defense ready after the materials are delivered.
If the Judge still denies you access to the information that you
want, you have an excellent basis for a not guilty plea during
the appeals process, and reversal of a guilty verdict. Now we’re
going to tell you what to look for in this documentation, so that
you can use it at your trial.
REVIEWING EVIDENCE
The repair records for the
radar unit will give indication as to the dependability of the
unit. If it has frequent repair records, you’ll find that
it may have a chronic problem. If there are infrequent repairs it
could mean that the unit has not been serviced properly and may
not be accurate. The manufacturers manual and specifications will
tell you at what frequency maintenance is suggested on the unit.
This information should assist you with your cross examination.
Check the units frequency against the FCC also. The radar
calibration log shows what time and how often the unit was
calibrated. Which means how often it was checked for accuracy.
There are two court cases you can refer to; Wisconsin versus
Hanson and Minnesota versus Gerdes. During those cases the Judge
determined that calibration checking with a tuning fork should be
performed within a reasonable time after the citation is issued.
In two other cases; Connecticut versus Tomanelli, and New York
versus Struck, it was ruled that a calibration by tuning fork
should be performed immediately before and after a citation is
issued. All four of these case have shown that tuning at the
start and at the end of the shift is not acceptable, although
this is the norm. The FCC license is granted for a specific
frequency or a specific range of frequencies. Check the
information in the manufacturers manual and specifications
against the FCC’s license. This should prove whether the
officer was operating the unit legally. Calibration by tuning
fork information is necessary to show that the unit had been
calibrated to what we call a "traceable standard."
Without the certificate of calibration, the tuning fork is
immediately suspect as being accurate enough to calibrate the
radar unit.
The daily log record of the
police officer may indicate that he prefers to ticket cars of a
specific color, make, model, or year. If there is a pattern,
there may be a particular location that he writes more of his
tickets. It could be that location has bad engineering, problems
with traffic control, or visibility of the signs are bad. That
could contribute to the amount of citations that are issued.
Basically it introduces doubt into the minds of the court. The
daily log of the police officer will list all of the citations
that were issued on the day that you received yours. Check for a
listing of citations that are similar to yours such as, same
speed, same location. That would tend to indicate that perhaps
the radar unit was locked in and the same reading was used for
more than one vehicle.
The police officer’s
radar training should show 24 hours of classroom instruction and
that followed by 16 hours of supervised field training. Most of
the time the officers are trained for a very brief period of
time. The National Highway Transportation Safety Administration
has endorsed and established the 24/16 hour criteria for
training. The police officer’s copy of the citation,
meaning both sides, can be informative because the officer
usually writes down his own notes to refresh his memory and if
you know what he is going to be remembering, you can bring up
other factors that he may not. The calibration of the speedometer
on the patrol car should show that it has been repaired properly
and is accurate. This is extremely important, if the patrol car
was moving when the radar unit was used. Maintenance records of
the patrol car may possibly show any mechanical or electrical
problems which could interfere with the proper operation of the
radar unit.
GO BACK TO THE SCENE WHERE YOU
GOT YOUR TICKET
Returning to the area where you
got your ticket can have several purposes. You may remember some
additional details that you forgot to write down on the day that
the citation was issued, and will also give you a chance to look
at the situation and the scene in a bit more detail. If you find
that there are some factors that may sway the decision of the
court at the scene, you’ll need to prepare documentation to
prove them for the trial. Your best evidence to present at the
trial about the scene would be a large diagram that documents
everything that’s relevant. Try to include the following;
All the roads, with the markings on the roads and their widths,
and all traffic signals that includes signs or lights. The
location of your vehicle and the officers vehicle at the time
that you were pulled over. Also include the locations after you
both stopped. Put down any structures in the area such as walls,
buildings, fences, etc. Note any foliage, brush, shrubs, hedges,
trees. Any other structures around the area such as billboards,
advertising banners, street signs, anything that might distract.
Put down any power line antennas, that sort of thing. It might be
important for you to take some pictures from the drivers view
point to illustrate any obstructing signage which may have caused
you to miss seeing a speed sign.
The size of your diagram should
be the size that will be easily viewed by anyone in the
courtroom. Keep it at a minimum of 8 x 10. Just bring these
reference materials to court if they will have a direct bearing
on your case. If what you have described on your diagram is
basically what is described on your citation, it won’t be
necessary to bring it in because it will only be helping the
Prosecutor with his case. If it does show some kind of some
serious contributing factor, don’t show these items until
the trial when you introduce them as evidence for the defense.
CHECK OUT THE COURTROOM AHEAD
OF TIME
If you’ve got time, spend
a couple of hours in traffic court to get a general lay of the
land. Usually the Judge will be same as for your case, but the
Prosecutor may be different. Pay attention during your visit to
the way the Judge addresses the defense, motions, or objections.
You might even be lucky enough to see another citizen try to
defend their own case, and see how he fares going down the paths
of justice. Is he as prepared as you are in your case? And, if he
made any mistakes, can you learn from them? If you’re lucky
there will also be a defense attorney there and you may also be
able to learn from his methods. Study the relationships between
the assistant district attorney, who is the Prosecutor, and the
officer who is testifying. Usually this will give you some kind
of indication of how comfortable they are working together, and
also the amount of detail that they require during a normal
preceding. Remember 95% of all traffic violations are paid
without question. This will give you some kind of expectation of
what you can look forward to before you have your moment in
court.
Finally, if you find that the
Judge is overruling any defense objections, you might want to
file for a continuance immediately. It can only help your cause
if you transfer to another court, if it appears that you are
going to appear before a Judge that will not be beneficial to
your case.
PLAN YOUR DEFENSE
Now that you’ve gone over
all the evidence that you are going to review, you’ve
looked at the scene for the second time and you’ve checked
out all of the documentation that you need to support your case.
It’s time to think of a defense strategy for your trial. Be
aware that most traffic tickets are argued from two different
areas; a false radar reading, or a mistaken identity of the
vehicle. Your defense strategy should be comprised of several
elements. They include some of the following, Lack of a
prosecution witness. This is your best chance for a mistrial. If
there’s no police officer, then there’s no witness,
and you’re not guilty. It can’t get any easier than
that. Prosecution doesn’t prove the case against you. You
should be familiar with all of the specifications of the code
that you are charged with violating. If the prosecuting attorney
doesn’t prove each and every item in the section of code,
you should file a motion of dismissal and it is likely that you
will win. If there are technicalities, such as the officer was
out of his jurisdictional area, he cited the wrong code, or the
address is wrong on the ticket. They are worth trying but don’t
expect them to get you a dismissal except for a jurisdictional
issue. If you plan on using this as your sole form of defense,
you may be caught unaware when the Judge over rules on your
motion to dismiss, simply because of a simple error.
The next item could be an error
on the ticket, a factual error on the ticket, whereby you were
not the driver, or you were not driving at an unsafe speed, the
calibration of the unit was inaccurate, or, it was not your
vehicle that was targeted by the radar. You’ll need
specific evidence, such as the unit was not calibrated, or you’ll
have to prove a procedural error on the part of the police
officer. Make sure that you keep a check list handy of everything
that you want to cover during your time in court. If the officer
shows up for the trial don’t worry about it, just move on
to your next defense level. If the prosecutor has covered all of
his bases, move on to the next level after that. All that you can
hope for is the best job that you can possibly do in your own
defense.
Prepare an alternative plan for
every single scenario. Being prepared will give you your best
advantage. Be ready to change your tactics at any time and have a
good knowledge of your case.
YOUR TIME IN COURT
The first time you hear the
Bailiff announce, "The people versus you", it kind of
sends a little chill down your spine. You’re entering a
strange arena that you really don’t have any knowledge
about, and you’re wondering to yourself why you didn’t
just pay the fine and be finished with the whole ordeal. Relax,
take a deep breath and be confident in the fact that you have
spent more time preparing for this case than the prosecution has.
His only advantage is that he knows how the procedure works.
We’ll try and balance that out for your in this chapter.
LOOK GOOD IN COURT
If you have had a chance to
visit a courtroom before your trial, observe how people are
dressed, so that you may dress accordingly. A normal attire will
be a suit for men, and a conservative business suit for woman.
Don’t wear anything loud, flashy, or attention getting. The
Judges first impressions of you are extremely important and you
want it to be lasting and favorable. Don’t let him form a
negative opinion of you before you even get started simply
because of the way you are dressed.
THE PLAYERS
People that you will contend
with in your trial are listed below:
Defendant - that’s you
The Prosecutor/ADA - he’s
the guy in charge of the opposing team.
The Judge - Basically he’s
the referee, he’s the one who is the final authority on
anything from the final objections, the verdicts, or the fines.
The Police Officer - He’s
the star witness for the prosecution.
The Bailiff - Think of him as
the Master of ceremonies, and he’s also Sergeant of Arms
for the court.
The Court Clerk - that is the
Administrative Assistant to the Judge.
The only additional players in
the scenario may be another police officer who was at the scene,
during the time that your citation was written. If it turns out
that one officer worked the radar unit and another one wrote the
citation, then both of them need to be present for your case, in
order for the prosecutor to make his case. If you don’t see
the other officer or officers involved in you case, at the time
you case is called for trial, you’ve got a good chance for
dismissal even before you get started.
Just remember that the Judge
being the final ruling authority can postpone you case until the
end of the day to see if the officer shows up for the trial. Be
prepared to wait that amount of time.
PROCEDURES AT THE TRIAL
Below you’ll see a
listing of typical events in the order that they will happen
during your trial:
The Bailiff calls the case.
The defense, that’s you,
and the Prosecution both reply with "Ready your Honor."
The Prosecution will give their
opening statement.
The Defense will give their
opening statement.
The Prosecution will present
their case, they will have the police officers testimony.
There will be cross examination
by the Defense.
There will be a re-direct by
the Prosecution.
Any physical evidence that
happens to be available will be brought to light at this time.
Any diagrams, citations, that
sort of thing, then the Prosecution will rest.
If you have the grounds, you
will make your motion to dismiss, on non-applicable grounds at
this point in time.
The defense case will include
your witness, either you or your passengers.
Cross Examination by the
prosecution.
Re-Direct by the defense, and
you as the defense, will rest.
Next will follow the rebuttal
of the witness by the prosecution.
The closing arguments by the
prosecution, by the defense, and then the Prosecution gets
another chance to make a follow up and respond to the Defense
closing. The verdict will be issued shortly thereafter, and then
you will get sentenced if guilty.
THE CASE FOR THE PROSECUTION
The Prosecution’s job is
to prove beyond a reasonable doubt through the use of testimony
and evidence that all the vehicle code sections that you’re
accused of violating, had in fact been violated. Typically, the
Prosecutor will attempt to prove that the ticketing officer made
a visual estimate of your speed and then verified that speed with
his laser detector or, by following you with his vehicle. Make a
note of the fact that the Prosecution has a case law which
supports their side of the story and that would be the State of
Kentucky versus Honeycutt which ruled that an officer does not
need to be an expert in radar operation, he only has to be
competent in the use of radar.
The purpose of your objections
during the trial procedure and the prosecutions presentation do
have two purposes. First of all, you want to break up the pace
that the Prosecutor and the arresting officer or the ticketing
officer are accustomed to. Primarily you can do that through
objections. Anything that appears to be subject should be
objected to. Take a look at what follows, for some of the typical
objections that you have available to you. Even if you are
overruled, the police and the Prosecution have to break up their
rhythm in order to wait for the Judge to make a ruling.
While the Prosecution is
presenting their case you should be making notes as to what was
said. Make comments concerning your upcoming cross examination so
that you are prepared before you get up to talk. Keep a tally, a
running record of the various points of the vehicle code in
question. As the Prosecution proves that point of your case,
check it off. This will be able to give you a record as to
whether or not he has covered all of the points in the case law.
If all of the code issues are not checked off and you know that
they have not been covered by the Prosecuting attorney, you have
reason to make a motion for dismissal. Keep in mind that the
Prosecutor must prove all the points in the code beyond a
reasonable doubt.
Now lets take a look at some of
the typical objections that are used in a traffic ticket trial.
TYPICAL OBJECTIONS
The entire purpose of the
objections is to keep the evidence limited to specific testimony
which is specifically relevant and admissible to the case. The
only one who has authority over this is the Judge. He can say
nothing about evidence that is produced in the case unless it is
objected to. There is a fine line between how many times you can
object and not be reprimanded by the Judge and also how few times
you can successfully defend your case without being run over by
the Prosecuting attorney.
Here are some of the objections
that you may come across in a typical trial.
OBJECTION, INDEPENDENT
RECOLLECTION When the officer begins his testimony, more than
likely he’s going to read from the copy of his citation.
You should immediately object to this since the officer is
required to testify from independent recollection. You should
also ask to see what the officer is referring to even though you
have received a copy of the citation through subpoena. More than
likely the Judge will allow the officer to use his notes to
refresh his memory, if the officer indicates to the court that he
requires the notes to testify properly. This starts everything
for dismissal because the sixth amendment to the Constitution
guarantees you the right to be confronted with the witnesses
against you. In this case, the officer and his testimony, not the
citation, are the witnesses against you. If the officer can not
recollect the circumstances of your ticket, he may be consider
incompetent to testify. You have to prove that the officer is
unable to testify without his notes to make him an incompetent
witness. If the back of the citation and the officer’s
notes signifies SB 124, then all he can testify to is SB 124, not
Southbound on highway 124. As you’ll soon see the notes on
the back on the officers citation can hurt the officers’
testimony and help you greatly.
OBJECTION, FOUNDATION A
situation arises when any witness testifies to something that has
not been previously established as evidence. For example, the
officer states that the speedometer on his police vehicle read 70
miles per hour. It is inadmissible in court unless the
calibration for the speedometer had been entered prior to that
point in time.
OBJECTION, SPECULATION This
type of objection occurs when a question is asked of a witness
and they introduce evidence that they could not possibly know.
For example, they introduce the fact that you could clearly see a
street sign or a speed limit sign and there’s no way that
they could know that. Only you could be aware of that fact.
OBJECTION, CONCLUSION In this
case the Prosecution would ask the officer to draw a conclusion
based on an insufficient amount of facts. For example, the
officer volunteered that you saw a stop sign and chose to ignore
it. He cannot make that decision because he does not have the
facts.
OBJECTION, NARRATIVE The
officer is allowed to testify in the form of a story rather than
a question and answer procedure. He has given a narrative. You
have a right to decide if a particular question would have an
objectionable response. If he tells the events without
questioning, you have no opportunity to object.
OBJECTION, NOT QUALIFIED It’s
similar to the previous objection, but in this instance the
witness testifies to something that they have no expertise in. If
the officer were to testify that your muffler was defective, he
doesn’t have the expertise to make that determination since
he’s not a muffler mechanic.
OBJECTION, HEARSAY In essence
this is anything said outside of the courtroom by someone who’s
not a witness. The officer may not state what a witness told him
at the scene. The actual witness would have to appear in order
for that testimony to be entered into the court record. If one
officer wrote a speeding ticket for a radar violation for another
officer, both officers must testify, only to the extent of how
much they were involved in that particular incident.
OBJECTION, IRRELEVENT These are
events that may or may not have happened and have no bearing on
the particular law that you are accused of violating. The officer
may state that you have had a hostile attitude towards him, which
has no bearing on the ticket. Your attitude is not relevant in
the speedy fulfillment of the law.
OBJECTION, IMMATERIAL It’s
very similar to the previous objection. It may be closely related
to the previous facts at hand, but it’s really not close
enough to remain admissible. Perhaps the officer would bring up
your driving record. Your prior traffic convictions have no
influence and should have no relevance to the ticket that you
were fighting at the present. You cannot be judged on your past
performances. If that were the case and you’ve had 12
speeding violations in the past three years, they would be
assuming that you would be guilty of this violation.
THE PREEMPTIVE OBJECTION This
is when you realize before the fact that the officer is going to
drop some bit of information that could be damaging to your case.
In this case, you would object prior to the officer even
mentioning it, just to disrupt their rhythm enough so that it
would throw them off. Be advised that you are only permitted to
be able to use this once or twice during the course of the trial
because you are going to aggravate the Judge. If you abuse this
type of objection, when you have a real objection the Judge will
just overrule automatically without hearing your case.
CROSS EXAMINATION
During the cross examination
period you’re acting as your own defense lawyer and your
main purpose is to discredit any witnesses testimony. In order to
create a reasonable doubt in the eyes of the court, remember your
opponent, the Prosecution has to prove beyond any reasonable
doubt that you are guilty of the infraction that you are accused
of. The key to succeeding in this type of examination is to find
the details that the police officer can’t possibly remember
and focus in on them. You should always be prepared for this type
of questioning and the best means of being prepared for that
would be by knowing the answers to the questions that you are
going to ask. You should be prepared for any answer that the
officer gives. His best answer will be the facts that he already
knows. Lets say you ask the officer the color of your car. On the
back of your citation he may have it indicated that your car is
blue. What you want to know is what shade of blue. If he tells
you the proper shade of blue on your car, move on to another
subject. If he tells you he doesn’t know, he can’t
remember the facts of his case, and if he tells you it’s
white, he hasn’t a clue and can’t remember what he
wrote on the citation. That happens to be great for you. Don’t
ever argue the case with the officer. Just ask questions. You’ll
have your chance in your case later in your motion to dismiss.
The next criteria for cross examining questions is whether or not
the questions will help your case. Don’t ever open up areas
or details of an investigation that could hurt your defense. You
don’t want to ask a police officer why he didn’t
write you a ticket for a broken tail light and only one for
speeding. It would be in the best interest to ask specific
questions such as, did you see the oil tanker truck in lane two?
You don’t want to ask him whether there was any other
traffic around because it would be too easy for him to get around
that question. If you ask him specifics he has got to remember
specifics. It’s also good idea to start all of your
questions with "Isn’t it a fact?" Simply because
the officer is under oath and must tell the truth. If he can’t
remember, he must state, "I can’t recall". The
more responses like that you get, the stronger your case . If the
officer can’t recall the details then he certainly does not
rule out reasonable doubt. Covering the Prosecution’s
examination of the officers testimony, note the strong points and
the weak points of the officer’s testimony. If he states
that he has the required 24/16 hour training in radar, leave that
alone. If he does not have the required training and was trained
by another officer attack that very hard. There are a number of
general questions that may be advantageous to be asked during the
cross examination. Some of them should include the location of
the defendant when the officer first spotted his vehicle. Did the
officer always have the defendant’s car in site with an
unobstructed view from the first contact, until the defendant
stopped? What was the distance between the officer’s
vehicle and the defendant’s vehicle at first contact? What
was the weather like during the entire pursuit time. What kind of
traffic was encountered during the entire pursuit time? In what
lane was the defendant’s car during the first contact? What
was the exact time of day when the offense occurred. How many
passengers were there in the defendant’s vehicle. What is
the specific color of the defendants vehicle. Did the defendants
vehicle have any noticeable structural differences? Perhaps
custom wheels instead of factory hubcaps. The whole point of
these questions is to discredit the officers testimony as much as
possible. If he continues to say I don’t remember and I
can’t recall, you are building up a reasonable doubt
towards the witness’ testimony. The next bright move would
be to move for a dismissal.
You may request a motion for
dismissal for several issues. We are going to try to cover the
different motions for dismissal you might want to try to use
during your trial. If you’re lucky, this is as far as your
trial will proceed.
Motion to Dismiss
Due to the denial of a right to
a speedy trial. This should be used at the beginning of your
trial if your actual trial date was more than 45 days from the
time of your original arraignment. Your date of arraignment is
determined by the date you stood up in court and pleaded not
guilty. This is a very rare instance and would cause great
embarrassment on the part of the court and the prosecutor. If you
get to invoke this motion consider yourself very lucky.
Motion to Dismiss due to denied
access to evidence necessary to your defense.
Again this would be used in the
beginning of the trial if your subpoena was ignored by the
prosecution. In most instances the judge will delay the trial and
order the prosecution to provide you the information you
requested. You don’t want to waive your right to a speedy
trial, but you may have to decide if it is worth getting your
subpoena information. Its a pretty fair guess that the judge will
not let the speedy trial clause slip by.
Motion to Dismiss due to
insufficient evidence.
The time for employing this
particular strategy is immediately after the prosecution rests
his case. If the prosecution did not prove all of the required
elements of the vehicle code you are charged with violating, then
you may invoke this motion. That’s why we suggest that you
keep a check list of all relevant points that the prosecution
needs to prove during the trial. It will be a handy reference
chart when you explain to the judge that you were never
identified as the driver, what road you were on, or any other
relevant factors to the vehicle code.
Motion to Dismiss due to
incompetent witness.
An extensive cross examination
is necessary in order to prove that the prosecution’s
witness, mainly the police officer, does not have the
recollection necessary to bring back the details of the day in
question when you received your citation. If you can get him to
state numerously that he does not recall, it is up to the judge
in his infinite wisdom to decide whether or not the officer
really remembers what happened on the day in question.
Motion to Dismiss due to
inadequate procedures.
This may be utilized if the
officer does not follow proper procedures, such as calibrating
the radar unit before and after his shift instead of before and
after the issuance of the citation. Use the case law to back up
your claim of inadequate procedures.
Motion to Dismiss due to
insufficient evidence, specifically a missing officer.
This is used in a case where
you have two (2) police officers. One is manning the radar and
the other is issuing the citation after the chase. Both officers
must appear in court since one cannot testify for the other. This
would also apply if the single officer not only monitored the
radar, but was in pursuit at the same time. If he does not attend
the trial or show up you may move to dismiss. You usually won’t
have to make a motion if a primary officer is missing. The
prosecution will generally drop the case because he knows he has
no case without the officer present.
The layered defense.
The strategies for beating a
speeding ticket basically follows a layered defense. In a layered
defense you will want one of the following to occur. The officer
or officers do not appear. Your right to a speedy trial was
denied, or you employed various motions to dismiss after the
prosecution rested their case. After these strategies have been
exhausted, it time to move to the defense presentation.
The following will serve as an
example of how to introduce evidence. Lets say that we are going
to utilize the introduction of a diagram of the scene of the
crime. The clerk of the court will mark the document with an
indicator. Usually exhibit A, B, C etc. It will then be shown to
the prosecution so that they have the opportunity to object to
the presentation of the materials. You will have to identify the
document as a diagram of the intersection of X & Y streets.
At this point proceed to explain how this diagram will relate to
your case. After you have done this, you must move that Exhibit A
be introduced as evidence, otherwise, that document or any other
document does not automatically become evidence. Once you have
introduced all of your evidence, you have a decision to make. Are
you going to testify on your own behalf or not. You do not have
to testify and you are under no obligation to do so. If you do
not testify, you deny the prosecution their right to interrogate
you under oath. You also have to consider what you’re going
to testify to. If you know you were going 62 miles an hour in a
55 mph zone you certainly cannot testify that you were doing 55
mph in that zone because you would be committing perjury, and
that’s another crime you don’t want to be involved
with. Regardless of what the crime is, you’ve admitted your
guilt and you’re now subject to another fine. Your only
salvation when you take the stand in your own defense is that
your testimony and your witness will outweigh the prosecutions
case and cause them to lose. After you have testified and your
evidence has been presented, if you elect to take the stand, you
are ready to rest your case. Make sure that the exhibits that you
wanted to be brought out into the trial as evidence, are taken
into account by the court. Once all those items are introduced,
you can rest your case.
Bring up their mistakes because
they have to prove that their case is correct. Stay strong in
your presentation because the prosecution will get one more final
word after you are done. Try to be brief in your presentation. If
you take far too long, the judge and the jury will stop paying
attention to you. State your case, sit down and wait for the
verdict. If you find at the end of your trial, that you are found
guilty anyway, it’s time to begin your appeal. First of
all, an appeal is a bit more complicated than a self represented
client defending themselves in court. Hire an attorney. An
attorney is going to want one thing out of you, and that’s
money. You’re going to have to give him money up front,
he’s going to represent you during your case and when the
trial is over, win or lose you’re going to have to pay more
money. Court transcript will be necessary for the lawyer to go
over to review all the facts of the case. When you do go in for
your appeal make sure that there is a court reporter present in
order to take a transcript of your trial. If there’s none
there, request one from the judge. He will provide a court
reporter for you. If he does not, you already have your grounds
for an appeal.
RADAR UNITS
Today most radar units are
extremely accurate. There are some conditions that must be met
however, and the conditions are as follows:
The road must be flat and
straight. There has to be good visibility, there needs to be a
minimum of traffic and the officer has to be properly trained to
interpret false signals generated by the equipment. Its very rare
to find these four conditions existing at the same time. There
are a lot of errors that can happen in routine traffic radar
operations.
How the system fails
The national Bureau of
Standards tested the six radar units most often used by police
departments. All of them produced signals that were false from
police radios or CD units. All of the units produced panning
errors, when used either out or in of the police cars. There were
shadowing errors that appeared on all the units when the police
cars speed was added to the targeted vehicles speed. 24 models
were tested by the International Association of Chief’s of
Police for five different manufacturers. Those results were even
worse than that conducted by the National Bureau of Standards. In
spite of the errors found, none of these units were dropped from
use. Some of these units are still probably in operation around
the country today. Radar errors can be a combination of many
factors but are all linked to one of the following 13 types of
errors found.
1. Panning - This happens when
the hand held unit is swept across the dashboard of the car or
the control unit mounted to the dash of the car.
2. Mechanical interference -
the a/c or heating fan in the police car, alternator, ignition
noises, rotating signs near the roadway, anything mechanical that
is operating in the vicinity of the roadway can throw off the
readings.
3. Shadowing - all moving radar
units have this problem since the targeted speed is calculated by
subtracting the speed of the police car from the closing speed of
the target.
4. Batching - this error is
caused when the police car is either slowing down or accelerating
when the radar unit is still calculating the speed of the
targeted vehicle.
5. Radio or Microwave
interference - any outside source of a frequency transmission
such as a CB radio, Ham or police radio, radar from a local
airport, cell phones, power lines, neon or mercury vapor lights,
power sub stations, etc., any one of these interference’s
can throw off the calculations of the radar unit.
6. Auto lock on wrong target -
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration suggest that
you disable the auto lock on units that have this function and
the newer units no longer have this capability.
7. No tracking history - this
recommendation is most often ignored. It’s one that is
stressed in the operational manual and its impossible to avoid if
you are using the unit in the "instant on" mode. The
errors occurs when there are multiple targets in the path of the
radar beam and the police officer has not observed the average
speed reading nor has he checked for any external interference.
8. Harmonic Error from Phase
Lock Loop - This problem is common with moving radar units when
the police car is accelerating and the target vehicle is moving
at a slow speed, typically under 20 mph and an error can occur in
the reading.
9. Terrain error - One common
factor in radar units is that they always read in a straight
line. They cannot read around a turn or the other side of a hill.
In this case, the radar unit may actually may be reading another
vehicle farther up the road rather than the target vehicle that
is going to be issued a citation.
10. Look past error - in this
case the radar unit finds a larger vehicle between the patrol car
and the targeted vehicle and locks on that one and gives an
entirely different reading for an entirely different vehicle.
11. Multiple bounce error -
These occur usually when there is an overpass in the vicinity of
the chase and the radar beam is reflected off of multiple targets
at the same time. The vehicle in question, an overpass, a sign,
etc. will result in an improper reading.
12. Reflection error - If the
antenna part of a radar unit is hung on the outside of the police
officer’s car , the beam can actually hit a side window or
part of the window and a false reading results which will throw
off the actual reading for the targeted vehicle.
13. Arm Swing Error - When the
officer swings the unit up to point at the targeted vehicle, the
speed of his arm is added to the speed of the vehicle and throws
off the reading generated by the vehicle.
In addition to these errors
listed above, there are several ways that police officers can
actually cheat on the reading. This has come about because some
smaller communities have found that traffic tickets are an
extremely effective way to raise money for their budget. These
intentional errors may include the following:
1. Target one vehicle that is
speeding and give out many speeding tickets to other people.
2. Whistle into the CB on the
patrol car which will give out a high frequency pitch and will
alter the speed that shows up on the radar unit.
3. Aim the unit at the ground
and swing the unit up into the air.
4. Clock an airplane that’s
flying very low.
5. Set the car mounted unit to
calibrate and the unit will register whatever the patrol car
vehicle’s speed is at the time.
TYPICAL CROSS EXAMINATION
QUESTIONS
In the Cross Examination
section it was pointed out that the most important factor to a
successful cross exam is to concentrate on as many of the small
details as possible. This section will take the questioning for
the radar portion of a cross examination and take it apart so
that it will be easier to follow. All of the questions may not
apply to your particular case. Just use these questions as an
outline for your own particular direction and not as a script for
use in the courtroom. You will also need to analyze the judge's
feelings as far as your line of questioning. Since you are
defending yourself, you will not likely be granted as much
freedom during the cross examination. Maintain a steady and
rational pace and you should keep the judge satisfied.
The following line of
questioning has been derived from the "Attorney's Deposition
Guide" which is available from the National Motorists
Association.
Introductory Questions: These
questions are formulated to establish the relevant facts in the
case and to create a friendly atmosphere with the ticketing
officer.
1. What specific type of radar
were you using when the ticket was issued?
Do not accept an answer like
"Doppler Radar" or "Moving Radar"
2. Would you please tell the
facts of the ticket as you remember them?
Remember your grounds for
objections concerning the officer reading directly from the
citation.
3. Was your audio Doppler
working at the time the citation was issued?
If the officer claims he
doesn't know what audio Doppler is, remember this response when
you get to the question section on audio Doppler.
4. What speed was your audio
warning set on?
If the officer claims he
doesn't know what audio warning is, remember this response when
you get to the question section on audio alarm.
5. Was your automatic speed
lock working?
A crucial response. If yes, you
have started building your case for operational error. If no, don
't worry, there's a lot more opportunities.
6. Were you using a manual
on-off switch or other radar detector defeating mechanism in
association with your radar unit?
7. Were you stationary or
moving when your radar unit's alert went off?
8. Was the target vehicle
coming towards you or moving away from you?
9. Did you see the target
vehicle preceding the time your radar unit's audio alarm went
off?
Another crucial answer. You
have essentially asked the officer if he took a traffic history
before issuing the citation. If he indicates that he did see you,
ask the next three questions. If he did not see you, stop your
preliminary questions here.
10. Were you able to determine
the target vehicle's speed from a visual observation?
11. What was the apparent speed
of the target vehicle?
12. About how many seconds
elapsed between the time you first observed the target vehicle
and the time your audio alarm went off?
Establish the officer's
qualifications: These questions are directed towards the
officer's training on the operation of the radar unit. Keep in
mind the national standard of 24 hours of classroom time followed
by 16 hours of field training.
1. How many years have you been
a police officer?
This is just a set up for
questions to follow.
2. How long have you operated
radar units?
Again, a set up question.
3. Have you received formal
instruction and training in the operation of radar?
If he says no, contain your
smile with your best poker face!
4. Under what circumstances did
you receive your training?
This will likely have a variety
of responses. A home run for you would be training received from
his own department by another officer.
5. How many hours of classroom
instruction did you receive?
A crucial response. No officer
generally has 14 hours of classroom. Remember Kentucky v.
Honeycutt is going to be used by the prosecution to justify the
officer having less than the 24 hours. If the officer has less
than three or four hours he is likely not qualified. This will
become painfully obvious to the officer as you continue you line
of questioning.
6. How long ago did you receive
this training?
If it was several years ago it
could indicate that he is not current in the proper operation of
the specific unit. It could also indicate that he was trained on
a different unit than was used for the citation.
7. How many officers took this
training with you?
If it was an extremely large
class, try to downgrade his level of training by asking
additional questions such as: Was the training a lecture? Were
you seated auditorium style? Where were you seated? Did you have
any other classes that day? Were questions allowed? Did you ask
any questions? If the officer can 't recall the particulars of
his radar training class, ask how can he remember the subject
taught?
8. Who taught this classroom
portion of the radar course?
If it was another officer,
question that officer's training credentials and ask for the
trainer's certification. If it was the manufacturer, you have a
potentially biased source of training.
9. Since your initial training,
have you had any additional radar course work?
He likely has not. If he has,
find out the circumstances just the same as you questioned for
the initial classroom training.
10. How many hours of
one-on-one field training with a professional instructor have you
had in the operation of radar units?
If he rode along with another
officer, again ask for that officer's training credentials. If it
was a factory representative, it was likely for thirty minutes or
less with multiple officers in the car at the time. Keep pressing
for an accurate answer.
11. Do you believe yourself to
be a competent radar operator?
What else can he say except
yes?
12. Do you hold a certification
in the use of radar?
Not likely but doesn't matter
either way.
13. When was your initial
training in the use of the (fill in the actual unit used)?
If he hasn't received specific
training in the actual unit, remember your need for a poker face.
14. Did your training include
the use of other radar units?
The goal is to subdivide his
training and show that he has had little or no training in the
specific radar used in our case.
Establish the officer's trust
in the radar unit: This is a faith check for the officer. He
likely isn't aware that you know some of the downfalls of the
particular unit involved in your case.
1. Do you believe the (fill in
actual unit used) to be a good radar unit?
What do you think the answer
will be?
2. Have you ever encountered
any problems with the unit?
Not likely, but if so, get the
specifics.
3. Are you permanently assigned
to one specific radar unit?
Again, not likely since most
departments move units around.
4. Do you believe that there
are individual differences among radar units of the same model?
Will one unit have an idiosyncrasy that another might not have?
Likely answer is they all work
alike. If he has noticed differences, get the specifics.
5. Do you believe the (actual
unit used) gives deceptive or false readings?
This is a crucial question. If
he says no, you can likely catch him with the manufacturer's
documentation (remember your subpoena). He will likely reply that
he has never seen any false readings. If so, skip the next
question.
6. About what percent of the
time does your radar unit give these false readings?
Make a note of the percentage.
7. Do you believe that you can
always tell when the unit is giving a false reading?
He will likely say that he can
always tell, which sets up your upcoming reasonable doubt
argument later in your presentation.
8. Is there a special number or
symbol that appears on the readout to indicate a false reading?
Of course not.
9. Does the unit give some
visual indication that the reading is questionable?
No it doesn't.
10. How, then, can you tell
that the reading you are getting is false?
He will likely say that there
is no target in sight or the target is clearly not speeding. If
he says that false readings only occur when there is no target
present, then that is essentially saying that the unit never
gives false readings. If he says that he can always tell that the
target vehicle isn't doing the speed indicated, finish this
section with the remaining series of questions.
11. Since there are no special
indications of a false reading, does that mean that all 82 mph
readings aren't false?
Of course not.
12. So the false reading could
be 20 mph or 70 mph?
It certainly can be. If he says
anything other than yes he is either trying to evade the
questions or technologically incompetent.
13. The radar could give a
reading of say 70 mph, but you could clearly see, for example,
that the target vehicle was only going 30 mph?
He should agree with this
question.
14. What if the speed limit is
55 mph, and the same 70 mph false reading shows up. Is that
possible?
He should say that this could
happen. You should use the speed limit of your particular case in
all questions.
15. Presuming the car
approaching you was going 55 mph, could you recognize that the
radar was malfunctioning?
If he says yes, press on with
the remaining questions. If he says no then end this section with
this question.
16. If an approaching car is
traveling at 55 mph and the radar gives a false reading
of 56, could you recognize
that?
Not on his best day.
17. If an approaching car is
traveling at 55 mph and the radar gives a false reading of 57,
could you recognize that?
Keep going until he commits to
a specific speed he could recognize or until it becomes obvious
that he actually can't recognize the actual speed. If he commits
to a speed within the range of your citation, you have
established reasonable doubt.
Audio Doppler, audio alarm and
automatic speed lock: These are special features that most radar
units incorporate to make the officer's job a little easier.
Audio Doppler is on every radar unit except the Speedgun Series.
If audio Doppler is used, it will aid the officer in confirming
that the target vehicle is speeding. The common problem is that
the audio Doppler can be turned down or completely off, thereby
contributing zero to the unit's reliability. The audio alarm is a
preset speed that the radar unit will sound the alarm to let the
officer know he has a fish on his line. The only way to disenable
the alarm is to dial in a very high setting such as 99 mph. The
automatic speed lock is the worst feature of any radar unit. Once
the unit reads a specific speed the unit then locks that speed in
on the display. The officer then has no way of knowing if the
reading is false or a momentary reading. This section should
establish the officer's normal operating methods.
1. Does your radar unit have an
audio Doppler? That is, a continuous audio signal tone that
converts the radar unit's Doppler shift into an audible tone?
This answer should be yes
unless the radar unit is a Speedgun. If it is a Speedgun, skip to
question 13.
2. Does the audio Doppler have
a volume control?
It does.
3. Do you ever use your audio
Doppler?
If no, ask the question one
more time and skip to question 13. If he says yes, press on.
4. About what percent of the
time do you use the audio Doppler?
Make a note and subtract from
100 % for question 10.
5. When you operate your radar
unit with the audio Doppler on, do you operate at full volume?
Unless he can't hear at all, he
should say no.
6. At what volume do you
normally operate the audio Doppler?
This is important if it is a
very low setting.
7. Do you ever turn it off?
Unless he answered question 4
with none, he will likely say yes.
8. Why do you turn it off?
It is extremely annoying, any
other answer is a cover up.
9. Does the audio Doppler ever
interfere with your use of the police radio or conversation with
other officers?
Of course it does.
10. So you operate your radar
unit with the audio Doppler turned off about (fill in the number
from question 4) percent of the time.
11. During the remaining time,
how often do you operate the radar unit with the volume on soft?
Note this percent amount.
12. Do you consider the audio
Doppler a valuable tool to prevent operator errors?
This is important if he replies
"no" and it ends up that he didn't use it during your
citation.
13. Is your radar unit equipped
with a dial which will allow you to select a speed above which an
audio alarm will sound if a violation speed is detected?
All radar units have this
feature.
14. Let's refer to that feature
as an audio alarm. Do you commonly use this feature of the radar
unit?
He has to unless he sets it so
high as to never work.
15. About what percent of the
time do you use the audio alarm?
If he doesn't say 100%, then
ask him how he disengages the alarm.
16. If the speed limit is 55
mph, what speed do you normally dial in as the pre-set violation
speed?
Note the speed, but this answer
isn't crucial.
17. Do you find the audio alarm
to be beneficial?
He will likely say that it is
sometimes useful.
18. If a violation speed causes
the alarm to sound, you only need to flip a switch to lock in
that speed on the radar unit?
That's how the unit operates.
19. Does the radar unit also
have a mode which will allow the unit to automatically lock in
the violation speed?
Yes, it does.
20. Do you ever use the
automatic speed lock function?
If he says "no': ask the
question again and emphasize the word "ever" while
giving the officer a skeptical look. If he still says no, end
this question section here. If he says yes, press on.
21. About what percent of the
time do you use the automatic speed lock function?
Note the amount.
22. Do you find the automatic
speed lock convenient?
Of course it is.
23. Do you use the automatic
speed lock for any other reasons?
This should be interesting.
24. Was the use of the
automatic speed lock included in your training?
This answer doesn't really
matter.
Determining if the officer uses
a visual backup: The typical officer has a standard pattern of
testimony. This pattern normally indicates that the officer
observed the defendant's vehicle doing approximately X mph and he
then used the radar unit as a backup to his visual estimation of
the speed. This is pure fantasy since the maximum distance a
highly trained officer can make a visual identification from is
approximately 500 feet. The radar unit can make the same
identification for up to 5,000 feet. As a result, the audio alarm
will sound before the officer can make the visual identification.
This section is designed to verify this fact and try to get the
officer to make a statement that will come back to haunt him
later in your presentation.
1. Are you familiar with the
term "traffic history?" I want to verify that this term
refers to the continuous observation of the traffic by an
officer.
2. With regard to speeding
tickets, it is normal for an officer to observe the traffic
patterns for several seconds - usually three to five - before he
sees what he believes to be a speeding violation. In other words,
three to five seconds before the radar unit sounds the audio
alarm. Do you agree with this assessment?
He will have to in order to
keep up the fantasy of the radar for backup.
3. With this definition in
mind, have you EVER taken a traffic history prior to issuing a
speeding citation?
He should say yes. If he says
no, refer to the answer to question 5.
4. What percentage of the time
would you say that you take a traffic history?
This number will likely be very
high.
5. Do you feel that it is
important to take a traffic history in speeding cases?
He will likely say yes. If he
says no, then you have a valid argument that he was relying
solely on the radar unit.
6. At what approximate distance
can you determine the exact speed of a target vehicle?
Most officers will say about
500 feet. If he doesn't give you a real answer, set up a specific
scenario, such as, in the median of a level and straight,
uncrowded highway. If he still doesn't answer suggest the 500
foot figure. If he doesn't accept 500 feet, adjust the number
until he agrees to a specific distance.
7. When you take a traffic
history and make the visual estimate of speed, do you do so
before the radar unit sounds the audio alarm?
This is a very crucial
question. If he says yes, he's had it since the radar unit has a
range of at least 1000 feet. Proceed with questions 8 and 9. If
he says no, then he hasn't taken a traffic history. Finish all
the rest of the questions in this section.
8. What is the approximate
range of your radar unit?
He will likely say he doesn't
know. Toss him a high figure in the range of 3,000 to 5,000 feet.
If he still doesn't know ask if he would be surprised to know
that the radar unit has a range of at least 3,000 feet. if he
says yes he would be surprised, you just caught him in a crucial
technical question.
9. Despite knowing this range
you still contend that the radar unit does not sound the audio
alarm before you are able to identify the speed of a vehicle?
The real escape for him is the
answer "no". He won't say that, he will most likely say
sometimes it does and sometimes it doesn't.
10. If the radar unit sounds
the audio alarm before you have determined that the target
vehicle is speeding, how can you say that you have taken a
traffic history?
He will have to say that the
alarm alerts him to the presence of a potential speeder.
11. Do you look at the radar
unit to see what the reading is?
He will likely say that he
looks. if he denies looking he has to admit that he knows the
vehicle is going at least as fast as the audio alarm setting.
12. Does the fact that the
audio alarm has sounded influence your judgment as you make your
visual estimate of speed? In other words, are you more likely to
agree that a target vehicle is traveling a certain speed since
the audio alarm has already acknowledged this fact?
He should agree. If he doesn’t
ask him why he doesn't just run the audio alarm setting up so
high that it will never go off?
Determining knowledge of beam
width and range: Remember that Kentucky v Honeycutt will be used
to show that the officer does not need to be an expert in the
field of radar. You are trying to demonstrate to the court that
the officer lacks certain basic knowledge that he should have.
1. Do you know what the normal
range of your radar unit is?
Get him to give you a figure of
some sort. Then give the manufacturer's data if you have it. If
not it will likely be at least 3,000 feet.
2. At a distance of 1,000 feet,
how wide is the radar beam?
Again, try to pin him down to a
figure of some kind. Figure a traffic lane to be 12 feet. In
reality, a 12 degree beam will measure 287 feet at a distance of
1,000 feet while a 24 degree beam will measure 574 feet.
3. How far away from the unit
will the beam travel before it covers one lane?
Again, get a figure. The true
amount is about 50 feet but most officers will guess around 500
feet.
4. With what degree of
confidence can you aim your antenna at a specific lane of traffic
at a distance of 500 feet.
The answer is no confidence at
all.
5. In the stationary mode, you
can operate to record traffic going away from you or coming
towards you, is that correct?
This is correct.
6. Can the radar unit
distinguish between traffic directions?
It will pick up traffic in
either direction.
7. In the moving mode, can the
radar unit pick up traffic in both directions?
The Speedgun 8 unit can, most
all others can only pick up traffic coming towards the radar
unit.
8. What types of things will
stop the radar beam? For example, will the radar
read through bushes and tall
grass?
Radar can pass through light
brush
9. Can you get the speed of a
vehicle around a curve or over a hill?
Not even possible. Remember,
the beam travels in a straight line.
10. Will the beam bounce off a
metal building or sign?
Certainly.
11. If the beam bounces off
something could it pick up the speed of another vehicle at an
angle to the radar unit?.
Absolutely.
12. Can a high-voltage power
line interfere with the radar beam?
Again, absolutely.
13. What about neon signs or
street lights, can they cause interference?
Notice a pattern here?
Final questions: These are
designed to apply the specifics of your case against the answers
the officer gave for the typical operation of the unit.
1. Could you again recall the
facts of this particular citation?
2. Was your audio Doppler on at
the time and if so how loud?
3. What speed was the audio
alarm set for? Did you make any adjustments to it during your
shift?
4. Was the radar unit's
automatic speed lock engaged?
5. Were you using a manual
on-off switch?
6. Were you in a stationary or
moving mode at the time?
7. Was the defendant
approaching you or traveling away from you?
8. Did you see any other
traffic around the defendant's vehicle? If so, what
types and where were they
located?
9. Was there any traffic moving
in the same direction as you?
10. Did you see the defendant
before your audio alarm sounded?
11. Did you determine an
estimated speed of the defendant's vehicle based on your visual
ident- ification? If so what was your point of reference?
12. How many seconds passed
between the time you first saw the defendant and the time your
audio alarm sounded?
13. Were there any power lines
in the area? Any cars or trucks with CB radio antennas? Were you
using your police radio at the time? Was your police car's engine
running at the time?
14. As for the calibration of
the radar unit, at what times before and after you wrote the
defendant's citation did you use the radar unit's internal
calibration function?
15. At what times before and
after you wrote the defendant's citation did you use an external
tuning fork for calibration?
16. In your opinion, what is
the difference between the internal calibration and the tuning
fork calibration methods?
17. Do you feel that one
calibration method is more accurate than the other?
Questions 14 through 17 are
critical to establish the calibration procedure followed by the
officer. Remember that case law has shown that the officer should
calibrate, with tuning forks, prior to and immediately after
writing a citation.
LASER
Laser and radar serve the same
purpose but they are really different entities, which are
achieving a common goal. Radar uses a radio beam and measures at
the speed of sound while laser uses a light beam and takes
measurement based on the speed of light. A typical radar beam is
between 15 and 18 degrees wide. Laser is considerably more
precise with a beam width of one sixth of one degree. At a
distance of 1 mile a radar beam can expand to over 500 feet wide.
A laser beam will only expand to 19 feet wide. At a more common
distance of 1000 feet radar will expand to over 100 feet wide,
while laser expands to only 3 feet wide. Despite its accuracy,
laser is not unbeatable. It is affected by weather conditions.
Fog, clouds and rain can significantly reduce the operating
range. You may not use it through a windshield, and it must be
used as a stationary set up. Calibration and maintenance may only
be done by a factory trained specialist at an authorized repair
facility. Laser beams usually target a vehicles license plate. In
order to work properly, light must reflect off the surface of the
vehicle and the license plate is designed to be highly reflective
for that purpose. If you have a low vehicle with little or no
chrome, it is difficult for a laser to detect you. In order to
avoid a laser, you should coat your license plate with a high
gloss clear coat so as to deflect the beam.
Before using a laser beam, it
should be calibrated by using all three of the following methods:
The self test button should be
used and the resultant should be 8.8.8.8.
Pointing the unit at a
stationery target should result in a reading of 0 mph. The audio
and sight tones should be tested by sweeping across a telephone
pole.
In this country, the most
commonly used laser detector is the Marksman LTI 20.20. The
manufacturer says that they will have a beam width of two feet at
a distance of 1300 feet. The accuracy is claimed to be precise
within 1 mph up to 60 mph and within 3 % for speeds over 60 mph.
This unit does have some downfalls. The Marksman has an unusual
distribution of beam intensity which gives you changes in the
aiming point. The Marksman can actually detect another vehicle
within five feet of the target vehicle. In order to prepare
against a laser defense you have to know what the jurisdiction
for laser cases is in the area that your citation was issued.
There are only a few states that have given laser judicial
notice, which basically is a legal ruling that establishes
specific evidence as beyond dispute. Radar has judicial notice in
every state. If there is no judicial notice entered in the state
in which you are appealing your ticket, the prosecutor needs to
have an expert witness testifying to the accuracy and reliability
of the unit. If that witness is the manufacturers representative
you can have him disqualified since his company has a financial
interest of that particular case, and he may be impartial. New
Jersey Superior Court Judge Reginald Stanton stated in his June
13, 1996 ruling that he was not convinced of the accuracy of the
LTI Marksman. He ruled that any readings taken with that unit
would not be accepted as evidence in any pending or speeding
ticket cases. If the state in which you are appealing your ticket
has been awarded judicial notice you might want to review the New
Jersey case when you prepare. The rest of the case is very
similar in how you would handle a radar defense. Concentrate on
the training of the officer, the self test methods and the
calibrations of the unit, what the weather conditions were, and
the amount of traffic that was traveling at the time the citation
was issued. Your best bet still is that the officer does not show
up in court. You should however, be properly prepared in case he
does.
PHOTO RADAR
Photo radar is basically a
computer system hooked up to a radar speed gun, with a camera
attached. What happens is when the radar gun detects a certain
speed the computer triggers the camera to take a picture of the
front and rear of the vehicle aiming at the license plate and the
driver. Afterwards, the citation is written up and mailed to the
driver at their registered address. Its all very neat and simple
for the law enforcement agency. However, it is extremely easy to
beat this type of ticket in court. Your easiest defense is to
simply throw the ticket away. If it does not come with a return
receipt that requires a signature, there is no proof that you
actually got the ticket and they cannot prosecute you on that.
What the legal system wants you to do is just send in the fine
and not ask any questions. This can be a big money maker for some
communities.
One other form of defense to
utilize on your behalf is the fact that when you are accused in
court you must be faced by your accuser. Obviously the computer
cannot appear in court as a defense method for the prosecution.
Also, you do not have to identify yourself as the driver of the
vehicle because it would violate your sixth amendment rights
against self incrimination.
There are two ways to beat a
photo radar unit, and basically make the photos useless in a
court of law. First, remove your front license plate. At the
worst you could get a minor repair ticket, which would be very
easily corrected. Or you could put a clear coat of paint over the
license plate. The coat allows you to read the license plate with
the naked eye, but causes an extremely high glare on the camera
lens and therefore the numbers underneath the glare are
indistinguishable. Potential sources of defeating the ticket are
usually not needed simply because statistics show that most of
the radar photo pictures are not legible because either the
license number cannot be clearly read, or the make and/or model
cannot easily be determined, and the driver is obstructed and
therefore cannot be identified. The photo radar speeding ticket
is one of the easiest to defend against, most cities and states
have abandoned the system all together.
VISUAL ESTIMATE, AIRPLANE RADAR
AND VASCAR
VASCAR is an acronym for Visual
Average Speed Computer & Recorder. This is simply a small
computer that will compute the vehicles speed based on the time
it takes to travel a specific distance. Basically it’s
distance divided by time equals speed. It’s usually hooked
into the patrol car’s speedometer. One of the more devious
applications of VASCAR is when an officer passes you on the
highway at a significantly higher rate than you are traveling, it
gives you a false sense of security. A few miles down the road,
you will find the police officer waiting for you, since he knows
the exact distance he has traveled, and the exact distance that
you have traveled, he can compute your speed and issue you a
speeding ticket. This is considered a speed trap in Washington
and California and as such is illegal in those states.
Plane speed detection - This is
very similar to VASCAR as the officer in the airplane measures
the amount of time it takes a vehicle to cover a certain
distance. The officer then computes the speed of the vehicle and
radios it to a patrol officer on the ground who stops the car and
writes a ticket. Having marks on the ground or highway are
considered illegal in California as they are considered a speed
trap. There are a few disadvantages to airplane speed detection
which can work to your benefit in court. Usually the officer uses
the airplane to pace the vehicle on the ground and get their
speed. You must explain to the courts that the airplane speeds
are measured in air speed which is relative to the surrounding
air. If the airplane is traveling into the wind, the speed is
slower than if the aircraft was producing the same amount of
power with a tailwind. Also, it may be difficult to determine
whether it was actually your vehicle that was spotted from the
air, since many cars look alike from such a great distance. This
could be the basis for a sound defense in court. A most
advantageous problem is that this system relies on two different
officers. Consequently, both officers need to be in court for a
conviction. It’s difficult enough to get one officer there
at a specific time and the odds of bringing both into court at
the same time are slim. If both officers do happen to attend your
trial, request of the court that one officer be removed from the
courtroom so that each may be interrogated individually, and
possibly contradict each other which would give you the basis for
a defense of reasonable doubt.
Visual Estimate - Basically
this is another term for guessing. The officer is relying on his
training as a police officer in order to convict you. It can be
extremely easy to defeat this type of ticket. It is very rare
that you are going to encounter this type of citation because the
officer and the court know they have only a minimal chance of
defeating you if you challenge his ability to visually estimate
speed. If you do have to counter his abilities to visually
estimate speed, take any object and hold it straight out from you
at arms length from your shoulder. Drop the object from that
point, and ask the officer to tell you how fast the object was
traveling before it hit the ground. To make it harder, use two
different items, a heavy one and a light one and repeat the test.
If you receive two different answers, you know he is guessing
because all items will fall at the same rate of 32 feet per
second squared, regardless of their weight. Make sure you have
that data available to you so that you will remember it. If you
measure the distance from the floor to your outstretched arm, the
following table will give you a listing of the actual mph that
that particular object was traveling just prior to it hitting the
ground.
If the distance traveled is:
The speed would be:
3.5 feet 10.2 mph
4.0 feet 10.9 mph
4.5 feet 11.6 mph
5.0 feet 12.2 mph
5.5 feet 12.8 mph
6.0 feet 13.4 mph
Let us presume that you
received a ticket for going 65 mph in a 55 mph zone. If you drop
the item from a height of five feet, and the officer estimates
that the item was traveling at a speed of 15 mph, you can see
from the chart above that he was off by 2.8 mph. Before you enter
into court, figure out the ratio factor between the speed that
you were alleged to have traveled, which would be 65 mph, and
divide that by the actual speed of the item that you had dropped
from 5 feet which is 12.2 mph. This gives you a ratio factor of
5.3. Since the officer estimated that the object dropped was
traveling at 15 mph he was off by 2.8 mph. Multiply 2.8 times the
5.3 ratio factor and you will find that the officer was off by as
much as 14.9 mph in his visual estimate. At this point, the
officer will know he is defeated and the judge will just wait for
your motion to dismiss.
PACING WITH ANOTHER VEHICLE
Pacing simply means that the
officer followed you with another vehicle, attempting to maintain
a constant distance and referring to his speedometer to gauge
your speed. In this case, the calibration of the police car is
critical to your defense. The defense strategies that we outlined
earlier may not all apply since the officer does not have to be
specifically trained in reading a speedometer, and it is unlikely
he was following the wrong vehicle. Your best bet is that the
officer does not appear in court and that the prosecution fails
to prove all the points in the specific section of the vehicle
code. Review the cross examination sections that we have
discussed earlier and also the radar ticket cross examinations.
These questions should get your thinking on the right track in
order to prepare the questions for the motor pacing case. Some of
the more important items for you to remember are the following:
Make sure the officer is giving
recollection of the incident and not reading directly from the
back of the citation.
Make sure that the officer
testifies that the unit was calibrated at a certain date, and
that the calibration certificate is present in court. Also, the
qualifications of the technician that calibrated the unit should
be available. Review the officers testimony carefully and also
the prosecutors line of questioning. If they leave out any of the
points covered in the vehicle code, you have grounds for motion
to dismiss. Don’t expect that this will automatically
happen, because the judge may allow the prosecution to reopen
their case if they do omit something. Ask the officer a series of
questions concerning the other traffic on the road. Ask him if
during the time he was pacing you, he passed any other vehicles.
If not, that would indicate that you were traveling at the same
speed as the other vehicles at that time of day on that section
of road.
Ask the officer as to the exact
distances covered from the time the officer began to pace the
speed of your vehicle until you were stopped. You would also want
to know the estimated distance between the two vehicles at all
times. Review the math and see if the officer actually had to
speed up in order to close the distance between your vehicles
before he pulled you over. It’s possible he could have used
the accelerated speed and used that speed as the basis for the
ticket.
BONUS - OTHER TYPES OF TICKETS
Parking Tickets:
If you get a parking ticket,
pay it. If you have an exorbitant number of tickets you may
consider fighting them, but you may be better off just paying
them. Also, consider yourself lucky that your car was not towed.
Repair Ticket:
If you get a ticket for a minor
repair such as a rear tail light lens that is broken, a head
light that is out, fix the problem; it will take care of the
ticket. The easiest way to avoid getting a ticket is to blend in
with the crowd. Keep your car in good repair. It will pay off in
the long run.
U turns:
You should prepare before you
arrive in court in order to defend this type of situation.
Research the vehicle code and look for the particular section of
code that gives all the details that must be proved against you.
The prosecution and the ticketing officer have the burden of
proof in order to prove you guilty. Most vehicle codes will
specify when a U - turn is illegal. Usually it is within a
residential area and within so many feet of an intersection.
Check with your local zoning office and see what type of district
you are in and then return to the scene, measure off the distance
from the corner where you made the U - Turn and refer to
different land marks on the side of the road. Your best hope is
for an officer that does not show up in court. Should he show up,
you can give the prosecution the tiniest details and hope that
these smaller known facts will cause the officer to slip up and
contradict his testimony.
Red Lights:
These types of tickets are
difficult to beat simply because it is your word against the
officer’s as to the position of your vehicle at the time
that the light actually turned red. The most important thing that
you will have to prove is the position of your vehicle at the
point that the light turned red. You have to be able to prove
that you were not in the intersection at that time. The best
location for the officer in this type of case, as far as you are
concerned, is behind you or at least parallel to you. That would
make it difficult for the officer to assess the exact position
your car was in at the point that the light turned red. If the
officer was approaching from a right angle, it may be difficult
for him to give an accurate view of your vehicle and you may even
state that he was not able to see your vehicle and the traffic
light at the same time. There may also be some obstructions that
may prevent him from having a clear view of the intersection such
as hedges, fences or buildings that may be in the way. This could
bring up the possibility of a theory of blocked visibility which
may assist you in defeating the ticket.
Stop Signs:
Stop signs are very similar to
red lights in the fact that you have to defend them in about the
same way. If the officer is directly behind you, it’s
difficult to assess the exact position of your vehicle in
relation to the stop sign. When an officer is checking to see if
your car actually stopped at a sign, the nose of your car will
actually elevate slightly when it comes to a complete rest. The
best place for an officer to observe this is from a 90 degree
angle to your vehicle. If it is behind your car, he obviously
can’t see the hood of your car and make the determination.
Basically any position that’s perpendicular to your vehicle
is impossible to win, since the officer has a complete view of
your vehicle.
Appendix A Public Records
Request Form
In accordance with State
Statute / Code _____________, I am requesting access to ____copy
/ copies of the following records:
1. Officer _____________'s
training records that pertain to his / her instruction /
certification and continuing education of traffic speed
enforcement and to the use of the speed detection device that was
used to ascertain the speed of the vehicle described in citation
#_______________.
2. Officer
_____________________'s daily log for the day of ______________.
3. Officer
_____________________'s radar log for the day of ______________.
4. The name, model and serial
number of the speed measuring device used to ascertain the speed
of the vehicle described in citation # _____________ and the
serial numbers of the tuning forks used to test the speed
measuring device.
5. Copies of maintenance and /
or certification records, for the last twelve months, of the
speed measuring device that was used to ascertain the speed of
the vehicle described in citation # _______________.
6. A copy of the FCC (Federal
Communications Commission) license that authorized the issuing
police agency and operator of the speed measuring device to
lawfully operate the device on a specific frequency and / or
range of frequencies.
7. A copy of both sides of the
officer's copy of citation # _________________.
8. Other record(s) needed:
_______________________________________________
_______________________________________________
_______________________________________________
_______________________________________________
_______________________________________________
The records that I am
requesting DO / DO NOT need to be certified or their authenticity
verified. If there is an additional charge for this, I understand
that I must pay for that charge.
I am requesting that the
requested records be mailed to me at the following address:
_______________________________________________
_______________________________________________
_______________________________________________
I will pick up the records upon
notification that they are available.
Signed
______________________________________
Date
______________________________________
Appendix B Notable Case Law for
Radar Tickets
Listed below are ten
significant case law examples which pertain to the use of radar
in speed enforcement by police departments. The first two cases
deal primarily with the reliability and accuracy of radar. The
next six cases all deal with the various aspects of police
officer training and field testing of the radar units. The last
two cases specifically address the K-55 model radar gun by M.P.H.
Industries, Inc. of Chanute, Kansas.
State of Florida v. Aquilera
(1979). This famous case is known widely as the Miami Radar
Trial. After a local television reporter showed a house clocked
at 28 mph and a palm tree clocked at 86 mph, the story broke
nation wide and radar was quickly shown to be less than accurate.
In this particular case the Dade County Court sustained a Motion
to Suppress the results of radar units in 80 speeding ticket
cases. The court's opinion stated that the reliability of radar
speed measuring devices as used in their present modes and
particularly in some cases, has not been established beyond and
to the exclusion of every reasonable doubt, nor has it met the
test of reasonable scientific certainty.
United States v. Fields (1982).
The District Court in Ohio ruled that it was impossible to
determine from the radar results whether the defendant was
traveling at 43 mph or whether the Speedgun Eight radar unit was
measuring the rotation of the ventilation fan at the sewage
pumping station next to the officer's car. The court also found
that the officer was not qualified to operate the radar unit
since he did not know the requirements for correct operation of
the unit. In addition, the officer did not calibrate the unit
before its use.
Commonwealth of Kentucky v.
Honeycutt (1966). This case is a very common prosecution weapon
against the 24 hours of classroom and 16 hours of field training
requirement. In this case the court ruled that an officer should
not be required to know the scientific principles of radar. The
court also ruled that the officer only needs to know how to
properly set up, test and read the radar unit. As such, a few
hours of instruction should be enough to qualify an officer to
operate the radar unit.
State of Connecticut v.
Tomanelli (1966). In the case, which is the same year as the
Honeycutt case, the Supreme Court of Connecticut ruled that
"outside influences may affect the accuracy of the recording
by a police radar set sufficient to raise a doubt as to the
reliability of the speed recorded." The court also stated
that tuning forks must be proved to be accurate to be accepted as
valid tests of a radar unit. In order to establish the accuracy
of the radar unit the operator must testify to the following:
1. That he made tuning fork
tests before and after the defendant's speed was recorded.
2. That the tests were made by
activating 40, 60 and 80 mph tuning forks and by observing that
the unit responded correctly in each case.
State of Minnesota v. Gerdes
(1971). The Supreme Court of Minnesota ruled that where the only
means of testing the accuracy of a radar unit is an internal
mechanism within the unit, and there is no other evidence of the
motorist's speed other than the radar reading, the conviction
cannot be sustained. The court also established the following
conditions for proving the accuracy of the radar unit:
1. The officer must have
adequate training and experience in the operation of the radar
unit.
2. The officer must testify as
to how the unit was set up and the conditions the unit was
operated under.
3. It must be shown that the
unit operated with a minimum possibility of distortion from
external interference.
4. The unit must be tested with
an external source, such as a tuning fork or an actual test run
with another vehicle that has an accurately calibrated
speedometer.
People of New York v. Perlman
(1977). The Suffolk County District Court ruled that the radar
device was not proved to be accurate since no external test had
been performed before or after the arrest. This case is
significant since it established the criteria of testing before
and after a citation is issued.
State of Wisconsin v. Hanson
(1978). In this landmark case, the Supreme Court of Wisconsin set
minimum conditions for the use of radar as evidence. Sufficient
evidence to support a speeding conviction with moving radar will
require testimony by a competent operating officer that:
1. He had adequate training and
experience in radar operation;
2. The radar unit was in proper
working condition at the time of the arrest;
3. The radar unit was used in
an area where there was a minimum possibility of distortion;
4. The input speed of the
officer's car was verified, the car's speedometer was expertly
tested
within a reasonable period
after the citation was issued; and
5. All testing was done without
the use of the radar unit's own internal calibration device.
State of Florida v. Allweiss
(1980). The Pinellas County Court ruled that the testing methods
for radar equipment are legally insufficient. "The use of
such a tuning fork furnished by the manufacturer in this court's
opinion is tantamount to allowing the machine to test itself. A
tuning fork furnished by the manufacturer is but an extension and
part of the total speed measuring apparatus which is furnished by
the manufacturer upon delivery.
State of Delaware v. Edwards
(1980). The court found that evidence based solely on the reading
from a K-55 moving radar unit was not sufficient for a conviction
since the unit has not been proven to be reliable.
State of Ohio v. Oberhaus
(1983). The court sustained a Motion to Suppress the results of a
K-55 moving radar unit. The court further ruled that the K-55
unit was only acceptable in the stationary mode.
Appendix C United States Radar
Speed Guns
Listed below are the major
radar units, along with their manufacturers, encountered in the
United States. These units account for approximately 90% of all
units in use today. Remember that every unit is equipped with an
audio alarm and all but the Speedgun series have audio Doppler.
Broderick Enforcement
Electronics (B.E.E.)
7155 Antigua Place
Sarasota, FL 33581
BEE- 36 K-Band Moving
Beam: 15 Degree Range: N/A
BEE- 36 X-Band Moving
Beam: 18 Degrees Range: N / A
CMI, Incorporated
P.O. Box 38586
Denver, CO 80238
Speedgun l &3 X-Band
Stationary
Beam: 16 Degrees Range: 1,500
Feet
Note: Lacks audio Doppler
Speedgun 5 & 6 X - Band
Stationary / Moving
Beam: 16 Degrees Range: 1,500
Feet
Note: Lacks audio Doppler
Speedgun 8 X - Band Stationary
or Moving
Beam: 18.6 Degrees Range: N / A
Note: Lacks audio Doppler
Decatur Electronics, Inc.
715 Bright Street
Decatur, IL 62522
Rangemaster- 715 X-Band
Stationary/ Moving
Beam: 24 Degrees Range: 7,500
Feet
Note: Longest range &
widest beam on market
MVR-715 X-Band Moving
Beam: 17.5 Range 2,500 Feet
MVR- 724 K-Band Moving
Beam: 15 Degrees Range 2,500
Feet
RA-GUN KN - 1 K - Band
Stationary
Beam: 15 Degrees Range 2,500
Feet
Kustom Electronics, Inc.
8320 Nieman Road
Lenexa, KS 66214
MR - 7 & MR -9 X - Band
Moving
Beam: 12 Degrees Range: 1,800
Feet
Note: Over 15,000 units in use
TR-6 X-Band Stationary
Beam: 12 Degrees Range: 1,800
Feet
MR-9 X-Band Stationary
Beam: 13.3 Degrees Range: N/A
KR - 10 & KR - I1 K - Band
Moving
Beam: 12 Degrees Range: 1,800
Feet
Note: KR - 10 is stripped down
version of $3,600 KR-11
KR - 10 SP K-Band Stationary
Beam: 15 Degrees Range: N/A
KR-11 K-Band Stationary
Beam: 15 Degrees Range: 4,100
Feet
HR - 4 & HR - 8 K - Band
Stationary
Beam: 12 Degrees Range: 2,000
Note: Similar to KR - 11 unit
HR- 12 K-Band Moving
Beam: 12 Degrees Range: 2,000
Feet
Falcon K-Band Stationary
Beam: 15 Degrees Range: 2,500
Feet
Road Runner K - Band Stationary
Beam: 15 Degrees Range: N/A
Trooper K-Band Moving
Beam: 15 Degrees Range: N / A
H.A.W.K. X-Band Moving
Beam: 12 Degrees Range: 1,500
Feet
Note: Forward & Rear facing
antenna
M.P.H. Industries, Inc.
5 S. Highland
Chanute, KS 66720
K-15 K-Band Stationary
Beam: 15 Degrees Range: N/A
K-15&K-35 X-Band Stationary
Beam: 15 Degrees Range: N/ A
K-35 K-Band Stationary
Beam: 18 Degrees Range: N / A
K- 55 &K- 80 K-Band Moving
Beam: 15 Degrees Range: N/A
K-55 X-Band Moving
Beam: 20.4 Degrees Range: 5,200
Feet
Note: Cheapest unit sold ($375
in NJ in 1978)
S - 80 MC X - Band Moving
Beam: 18 Degrees Range: N / A
Other Resources
The following organizations and
WEB locations are recommended for additional information
concerning traffic tickets:
National Motorists Association
402 W. 2nd Street
Waunakee, WI 53597
608-849-6000
http://www.motorists.com
The NMA is an organization
focused on drivers’ rights and speeding tickets. For an
annual fee of $29.00, members receive extensive information,
support and additional benefits. After you first dues renewal,
NMA will pay one speeding ticket per year for a member who fights
a speeding ticket in court and is found guilty. They also offer a
variety of reading materials and legal services.
RADAR (Radio Association
Defending Airwave Rights)
4949 South 25 A
Tipp City, OH 45371
513-667-5472
http://www.haus.net/radar
RADAR is an organization who
focuses more on issues involving the use of radar speed measuring
devices. For an annual fee of $29.00, members receive a variety
of information concerning the use of radar. Unlike NMA, RADAR
does not offer legal services or offer to pay convicted tickets.
RADAR is an excellent resource for all information concerning the
use of radar.
The WWW Speedtrap Registry
http://www.nashville.net/speedtrap/
The WWW Speedtrap Registry is a
state by state listing of known speedtraps. Users are able to
view listings by state and are encourage to submit any new
speedtraps not currently listed. There is no fee for this
service.
The WWW Cop Car Registry
http://www.nashville.net/speedtrap/copcars/
As you can see,
the folks at the WWW Speedtrap registry also run the WWW Cop Car
Registry. This site is also broken down by state and lists the
known cop cars in use by local and state police departments.
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