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Drivers quick with an excuse (traffic tickets)
Jackson Citizen Patriot ^ | 4-10-05 | Larry O'Connor

Posted on 04/10/2005 8:43:30 AM PDT by Dan from Michigan

Drivers quick with an excuse
Sunday, April 10, 2005
By Larry O'Connor

When confronted by a traffic cop, motorists will say the darnedest things to dismiss their misdeeds.

Last year, police agencies in Jackson County doled out 47,005 tickets. In return, officers writing those dreaded citations heard at least that many excuses.

Few are original and even fewer are legitimate, officers say.

"Only in about 2 percent of the cases will they tell you the truth," said state Trooper Dave Clark, a 16-year road patrol veteran.

At least in one instance, the oft-repeated claim of urgently needing to go to the bathroom was no snow job.

About 21/2 years ago, sheriff's Deputy Dan Deering stopped a driver who was zipping down U.S. 127 well over the posted 55 mph limit.

The driver claimed she had to go to the bathroom.

To flush away doubt, she bolted past the deputy, ran into the adjacent woods and proceeded to relieve herself, Deering said. In the passenger seat, her husband sat dumbfounded.

"I handed him the ticket," said Deering, a seven-year road patrol veteran.

Another speeding driver claimed to be on his way to Foote Hospital to deliver vital organs for transplant surgery.

With no heart or kidney in the front seat, Jackson police Officer Chuck Brant was somewhat dubious and ticketed the driver. Another driver later offered the same excuse but at least produced a bag of blood products.

"I let him go," said Brant, the city's top traffic enforcement cop.

For the ticket writer, part of the fun is poking holes in the concocted claims.

"I put (the excuses) into the top of the funnel and keep pushing them down with questions," Deering said. "Pretty soon the funnel is upside down."


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Michigan
KEYWORDS: drivers; excuse; tickets
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To: Dan from Michigan

Was discussing traffic citations with a friend yesterday. He said once his wife was pulled over for speeding. She told the officer bluntly that she was late for something and did "not have time for this." She then drove off, leaving the officer standing there. He did not pursue. Being acquainted with this guys' wife I can understand why the officer would just as soon let it go.


81 posted on 04/10/2005 10:30:02 AM PDT by Fester Chugabrew
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To: Dan from Michigan

Anyone driving in such a manner that warrants being stopped warrants being arrested. Everything else is a shakedown and state sponsored highway robbery. Traffic cops are tax collectors and nothing else. When the mafia does it, it's extortion, when the cops do it for the insurance companies, it's traffic enforcement.


82 posted on 04/10/2005 10:35:21 AM PDT by agitator (...And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark)
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To: cripplecreek
The cop who gave me the ticket for speeding put an arrow pointing up next to the 74 and told me that it could become a criminal offense if I decided to fight it.

In Washington the statute expressly says that the worst that can happen if you contest a ticket is that you have to pay the fine based on the original citation.

In my limited observation, contesting a ticket has around a 40% chance of complete dissmissal and 100% chance of reduction in fine.

83 posted on 04/10/2005 10:36:04 AM PDT by 13foxtrot
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To: Goodgirlinred
The police are always nice to me. :)

Its more like Stockholm Syndrome. Cops basically make people they pull over wet themselves in fear, humiliate them,and then make them "perform" for their amusement. Then when the cop shows the least bit of kindness (lowering the speed a little bit or giving them driving directions that any human being would do) the person pulled over thinks of them as "so nice".

84 posted on 04/10/2005 10:37:46 AM PDT by JeffAtlanta
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To: Fester Chugabrew

LOL!

I got stopped once coming off a shift at a hospital in New Orleans. The trooper saw my coat and asked if I was a doctor. When I told him I was, he handed me my license back and said "Have a nice day; I don't give tickets to Doctors, Priests, or Marines"

Drove the wife nuts, as she hates how I drive. ;)


85 posted on 04/10/2005 10:38:35 AM PDT by Maury
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To: wyattearp

I would have appealed that for the rest of my life.


86 posted on 04/10/2005 10:41:46 AM PDT by international american (Tagline now fireproof....purchased from "Conspiracy Guy Custom Taglines"LLC)
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To: Luke21

"But you got soccer moms and liberals and children's advocates, most of whom drive like maniacs, all over it if you ever try to get speed limit changes officially."

Yeah, it's funny...in the school zone near my home, everyone goes 15 mph except the soccer moms dropping their kids off. They have actually passed me in the school zone (guess I was going too slow!) to whip into the parking lot to disgorge their precious cargo. I guess they don't need to go slow...they're special!


87 posted on 04/10/2005 10:44:16 AM PDT by Altamira (Get the UN out of the US, and the US out of the UN!)
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To: JeffAtlanta
Oh. Hmmm. Well, I had one who thought I might have been drinking because I sat under a red light for a little while (no traffic was coming) because I was not sure how to get back on the interstate going the way I wanted to go at 4:00 A.M. give me directions when he realized I had not been drinking and then tell me to flag an officer when I got to the suburb of Birmingham where I was going so he could get me to my daughter's house so I would not get lost in a bad neighborhood. That was sweet, wasn't it? I mean, they never get nasty with me. And the one that let me go without a ticket was nice. I think I gave HIM Stockholm Syndrome. :)
88 posted on 04/10/2005 10:44:56 AM PDT by Goodgirlinred ( GoodGirlInRed Four More Years!!!!!)
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To: Larry Lucido

Oh, he would not have done that. He was a police officer. :) Exactly what did you mean?


89 posted on 04/10/2005 10:46:46 AM PDT by Goodgirlinred ( GoodGirlInRed Four More Years!!!!!)
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To: whereasandsoforth

Your son speed THROUGH a SCHOOL ZONE, gets a speeding ticket and this is crap? As the father of 5 kids in those school zones, I can assure you that I do NOT share your opinion.

My parents made it very clear to me that if I ever sped through a school zone I would never drive one of their cars again. Though I own my own cars now, I suspect they would STILL be so upset my 70 year old dad would try to kill me.

I don't think I ever disagreed with so many Freepers.


90 posted on 04/10/2005 10:52:50 AM PDT by mad puppy ( "He's with me!" And I'm with W.)
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To: whereasandsoforth

"The cop informed my son he could get a court order to search the truck. My son told the cop that he was late for work, but in this case he had all day, so get on and get a court order."

Bravo for your son! If more people refused these kinds of searches, and told the cop to go ahead and try to get a warrant (which he couldn't get without some sort of reasonable suspicion that the vehicle contained contraband) maybe they'd stop wasting our time with such silly games.

It is never a good idea to let a cop search your vehicle. You never know what he might plant in your car. This is especially true if you drive a hot or nice car; they will seize it after they plant the drugs in your car, and it will end up as part of the department's "DARE" (Drug Awareness and Resistance Education) vehicle fleet. Beware.


91 posted on 04/10/2005 10:53:07 AM PDT by Altamira (Get the UN out of the US, and the US out of the UN!)
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To: Loud Mime

"If you admit you know that you were breaking the law, you will be ticketed. That's why they ask you. "

Not always the case. I've admitted to going over, and was let go with a warning. If you're busted, you might just as well 'fess up; there are other ways to fight the ticket.


92 posted on 04/10/2005 10:56:47 AM PDT by Altamira (Get the UN out of the US, and the US out of the UN!)
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To: agitator
>>>>When the mafia does it, it's extortion, when the cops do it for the insurance companies, it's traffic enforcement<<<<


Politicos are so in tune with the Insurance Companies, the lessons were learned from California (Texas is on that slippery slope) the amount of State Revenue that can be generated via "Compliance" and "License" is just too much for lawyers and politicians to resist.

But it is all for our own good...
93 posted on 04/10/2005 10:58:16 AM PDT by TexasTransplant (NEMO ME IMPUNE LACESSET)
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To: Darksheare
"........my car is devouring me. "

You have the funniest story here. All I can see is Basil Fawlty stopped by a cop.


On the other hand, the policeman may have had a very serious situation for all he knew. Experts tell us to disable tail lights if we are ever kidnapped and stuffed in a trunk. Ok, I know you said you were in a hatchback, but still you could have had some victim in there. I'm glad he stopped you just for that caution.
94 posted on 04/10/2005 10:59:16 AM PDT by A knight without armor
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To: Dan from Michigan
A funny story about my sister-in-law, she was 7 months pregnant and she got busted for going 10 over. The cop pulled her over in front over house.

She told the Officer she had to go to the bathroom and she would be out in a few. She still got a ticket.

Well she fought it and won. Guess seeing a 5'2" pregnant blond waddling in court, saying she had to rush home to use the bathroom would get her off.
95 posted on 04/10/2005 11:00:08 AM PDT by Springman
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To: Altamira
If the speed limits are being set illegally (ie, not per the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, or MUTCD, which has been adopted as LAW by every state, whose governments ignore it so that they can set the speed limits artificially low to engage in revenue generation) then is it really breaking the law to violate them? The MUTCD sets forth a standard whereby the speed limit is to be set at the speed at which the 85th percentile driver drives. If everyone is "speeding" it's an indication that the speed limit is too low, not that everyone is a scofflaw. If the government won't abide by the law, then why should the citizens, particularly when the "offense" is merely malum prohibitum and not malum per se.

Right.
The law is bad, so we break it. We don't change it, we just break it and justify breaking it because we think it's bad.
"Everyone" is speeding so OBVIOUSLY the speed limit is too slow.

The same attitude goes for drugs. "Everybody does it, so the law MUST be bad." Sounds like teenager-think.

Relative morality.

Work to change the law rather than just break it and try to justify violating the law.
Or break the law, pay the fines and stop whining about it.
Or break the law, then don't bellyache or sue when someone gets in an accident and dies or becomes a quadreplegic from speeding.

96 posted on 04/10/2005 11:05:38 AM PDT by starfish923
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To: A knight without armor

What was even better, the tail lights blew out due to there being a stack of full 2 liter soda bottles in the trunk that I'd had to grab for someone for a birthday party or some such.
And when I made the turn, they slid and bashed into the assemblies for the lights, and the rest is history.

But at least I got my turn signals and one marker light back on.
The poor cop though, I have the hatch open, and it slowly comes down and then thuds into my back like a giant jaw.


97 posted on 04/10/2005 11:10:17 AM PDT by Darksheare (#####This tagline has been viciously run down to prevent it's escape. It has tire marks on it. #####)
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To: starfish923

""Everyone" is speeding so OBVIOUSLY the speed limit is too slow."

Yes, now you get it! If the LAW were followed, then everyone would not be speeding, because the speed would be set at what the 85th percentile driver drives.

Your moralizing is really not persuasive. Sensible people know the difference between malum prohibitum and malum in se, and can use their own moral compass to differentiate between the two. Why don't you use your head instead of being slavishly law-abiding?


98 posted on 04/10/2005 11:10:33 AM PDT by Altamira (Get the UN out of the US, and the US out of the UN!)
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To: bandleader
This sounds very much like Mr.&Mrs.BeelzeBubba's utter contempt for Law and Order!!We don't want to go there again,do we?

Weary sigh.
It's more of a Libertarian mantra on this site. Government overstepping its boundaries, being bad, eevulll and unnecessary, as usual.
And we WILL have to go there again, whether we want to or not.

99 posted on 04/10/2005 11:13:01 AM PDT by starfish923
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To: mad puppy
Your son speed THROUGH a SCHOOL ZONE, gets a speeding ticket and this is crap? As the father of 5 kids in those school zones, I can assure you that I do NOT share your opinion.

It depends on what kind of "school zone" it was. Many school zones are just actually speed traps. There is a stretch of road in front of an elementary school a few miles away that is a 25 mph school zone 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The speed limit on that road is 45 before and after the school.

There is also a "school zone" near my house that is really just the entrance to a private preschool. The preschool and its grounds are FAR from that intersection - its just an intersection.

Many "school zones" I know of are just a stretch of road in front of high school. There are no sidewalks and students NEVER cross the street - they couldn't even if they wanted to as there is nothing on the other side to go to. What sense does it make to consider this a "school zone" for traffic?

Many people think "school zone" and automatically think of crossing guards escorting elementary school kids across the street. In reality, those are pretty rare.

100 posted on 04/10/2005 11:13:24 AM PDT by JeffAtlanta
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