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Cops' eye judgment enough for speeding conviction

POSTED BY: GEEZER
UPDATED: Friday, June 4, 2010 02:35
SHORT URL:
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Thursday, June 3, 2010 3:21 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

UNDATED - Bad news for drivers with a need to speed. The Ohio Supreme Court has ruled police officers can make a speeding judgment using only their eyes, and the officer's recollection is enough evidence to convict drivers of speeding.

The case involves a driver caught on radar violating the speed limit. The driver challenged the ticket, saying he wasn't speeding, but drivers near him were.

The radar reading was thrown out when the officer involved could not prove he was qualified to operate the radar gun, but a judge decided the driver was still guilty because the officer was trained to visually judge speed. Ohio's highest court upheld the lower court conviction in a 5-1 ruling.
John Townsend with AAA Mid-Atlantic says the ruling is troubling.

"Human beings make mistakes, and what this is saying is that officers of the law can't make mistakes," he says.

If you get a speeding ticket this way, Townsend says you should take it to court.

"Challenge it," he says. "Make the officer prove that you're actually speeding. It's worth your time, and it's worth your money."

(Copyright 2010 by WTOP. All rights reserved.)



http://wtop.com/?nid=25&sid=1971527

And the money comes rolling in.




"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 4:09 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


"Challenge it," he says. "Make the officer prove that you're actually speeding. It's worth your time, and it's worth your money."

Hello,

Was it?

This is indeed troubling.

--Anthony


"On this matter, make no mistake. I want you to go fuck yourself long and hard, as well as anyone who agrees with you. I got no use for you." --Auraptor

"This vile and revolting malice - this is their true colors, always has been, you're just seeing it without the mask of justifications and excuses they hide it behind, is all. Make sure to remember it once they put the mask back on." --Fremdfirma

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 4:16 AM

JONGSSTRAW


That is a ridiculous decision if I ever heard one. Even more ridiculous is the TICKET I got yesterday for not wearing a seat belt......$ 115 frikkin' dollars! It's goddamn fascism is what it is. The cops had a sting set up at a major intersection. When you stop for a red light, they simply walk up to your car and look at you; then they tell you to pull over to a nearby parking lot where they write you a $115 ticket. In Florida, motorcyclists do NOT have to wear helmets, so why do we have to wear seatbelts in cars? I'm an adult, it's my decision, so fuck all these goody-two-shoes who have the nerve to impose their crap on me, and then FINE me for not obeying their made-up, arbitrary horseshit rules. I've been driving for 40 years without a seat belt, but now that the cops and cities have a new REVENUE GENERATOR I guess I'll have to follow their rules. What's next?...$ 1000 fine for smoking in a car??...or $500 fine for changing the radio station in a car? Where does it stop?

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 4:57 AM

BYTEMITE


Here's something you could do, Jong.

Have a friend in the car with you take your picture, with timestamps, as you take off your shirt, put on the seat belt, and then (somehow?) put your shirt on over it. Try to make the illusion as convincing as possible, then drive to the intersection where the sting operation is taking place.

Hopefully one of the cops will try to write you a ticket. This is probably time-stamped as well for a report.

Afterwards, take some pictures again showing that you still had your seatbelt on under your shirt.

Then challenge the fine in court, and lodge a formal complaint about the sting operation.

The complaint may not go anywhere, but you might make a point about how the officers are wasting their time (and tax payer money) with offenses that NORMALLY aren't even charged unless observed in conjunction with ANOTHER driving offense.

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 5:11 AM

JONGSSTRAW


I appreciate your advice Byte, but it's not in my nature to do anything like that, at least not any more. I will abide, and submit to the will of Landru once again. Little by little, over the years, almost everything I knew and believed in has vanished and been replaced with new rules for the little people like me to obey. That's my lot in life. I'm a wuss who just doesn't want any problems. But I can and do vent occasionally.

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 5:30 AM

BYTEMITE


...Then can I use it, if a similar practice ever comes here?

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 6:05 AM

PIRATENEWS

John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!


Quote:

Originally posted by Geezer:

The driver challenged the ticket, saying he wasn't speeding, but drivers near him were.



That's "almost" called a CONFESSION to the crime, if done during sworn TESTIMONY on court, but was sufficient to help prove the RADAR was false and thus the court ordered the RADAR evidence stricken from the record.

How Any Idiot Can Beat a RADAR Speeding Ticket (SHUT UP, DON'T CONFESS!)
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5186628884102899588&hl=en#

All radar speeding tickets require a cop to first make a visual guestimate of speed.

The proper way to make that argument is Equal Protection doctrine in the 14th Amendment to US Constitution, and in every State's constitution. But you can't say "other drivers" were not prosecuted, you must accuse the COP of the crime of speeding, using his own in-car videotape. Cops never have immunity from traffic laws unless BOTH their emergency lights and siren are ON. The driver MUST file an Affidavit of Probable Cause for Criminal Complaint against the cop, in the SAME CASE, and demand the judge immediately arrest the cop.

Or make a citizens arrest of the cop at any time, using the same procedure as any private security guard arresting shoplifters, or a homeowner arresting a burgler.

Either the judge MUST sign the arrest warrant for the cop, or MUST dismiss all charges against the driver. That's THE LAW.


youtube.com/watch?gl=GB&hl=en-GB&v=yqMjMPlXzdA







Free e-book: How to Beat a Speeding Ticket
http://norman-law.com/legalbooks.htm

Buy this book: Beat Your Ticket, Go to Court & Win
http://www.nolo.com/products/beat-your-ticket-BEYT.html

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 6:13 AM

PIRATENEWS

John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!


Quote:

Originally posted by Jongsstraw:

I've been driving for 40 years without a seat belt



You should always wear a seat belt, if only to help maintain control without sliding around in the seat during an emergency maneuver. It also keeps the steering wheel from stabbing you in the chest and your feet breaking off in a crash, or being ejected like a cannonball into a tree. My cousin was killed on a motorcycle 2 months ago, when his tire exploded and he was ejected into a tree, while wearing a "brain bucket" excuse for a helmet (not a real helmet).

Jus sayin.

As for a legal defense, you can testilie to the judge you took your seatbelt off after you stopped, before the cop walked up. Depends on the circumstances. You can demand to read the cop's personnel file, and see his in-car videotape to check for HIS traffic crimes that day. Just don't CONFESS to not wearing a seatbelt while driving.

Win or lose, you make the cop and court WORK for stealing your money.

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 6:27 AM

PIRATENEWS

John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!


Quote:

Originally posted by Geezer:

http://wtop.com/?nid=25&sid=1971527



Note this pathetic an excuse for "news reporting", without NAMING the actual defendant nor case citation, nor providing a link to a pdf of the court's opinion. That's PROPAGANDA because the radio station is employed by Big Brother in a PR capacity.

Here's the correct way to report this story:

Quote:

Ohio Supreme Court Upholds Speeding Ticket By Visual Guess

Police officers in Ohio can issue speeding tickets based on sight, state supreme court rules.

In a 5-1 decision yesterday, Ohio's Supreme Court upheld a speeding ticket based solely on how fast a driver appeared to be moving. The court considered the case of motorist Mark Jenney who drove through a State Route 21 radar speed trap operated by Copley police officer Christopher R Santimarino on July 3, 2008. Santimarino guessed based on the appearance of Jenney's black SUV that it was traveling at 79 MPH in a 60 zone.

Santimarino claimed that his thirteen years as a traffic cop and his certification in speed estimation by the Ohio Peace Officer Training Academy qualified him to make expert visual determinations of how fast vehicles are moving within 4 MPH. In court, Santimarino testified that his radar showed Jenney was traveling at 82 MPH on direct examination and 83 MPH on cross-examination.

Based on this, a district court convicted Jenney. On appeal, Jenney succeeded in having the radar evidence thrown out because the officer failed to produce the required certification documents at trial. The appeals court then ruled that the visual guess as to Jenney's speed was sufficient evidence for a conviction. Jenney appealed to the supreme court, which agreed with the lower court rulings that an officer's educated guess is sufficient to overcome that state's burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt.

"A majority of the appellate districts that have considered the issue have held that an officer's testimony that in his opinion, a defendant was traveling in excess of the speed limit is sufficient to sustain a conviction for speeding," Justice Maureen O'Connor wrote for the majority. "Given Santimarino's training, OPOTA certification, and experience in visually estimating vehicle speed, his estimation that Jenney was traveling 70 miles per hour was sufficient to support Jenney's conviction... We hold that a police officer's unaided visual estimation of a vehicle's speed is sufficient evidence to support a conviction for speeding in violation of R.C. 4511.21(D) without independent verification of the vehicle's speed if the officer is trained, is certified by the Ohio Peace Officer Training Academy or a similar organization that develops and implements training programs to meet the needs of law enforcement professionals and the communities they serve, and is experienced in visually estimating vehicle speed."

Justice Terrence O'Donnell filed a dissent that argued the majority essentially created a standard that the police officer is always right.

"Like any other witness, a police officer's credibility is to be determined by the jury or other fact-finder," O'Donnell wrote. "In fact, jury instructions given regularly by trial judges advise that a jury is privileged to believe all, part, or none of the testimony of any witness. Thus, I would assert that a broad standard as postulated by the majority that a trained, certified, and experienced officer's estimate of speed is sufficient evidence to support a conviction for speeding eclipses the role of the fact-finder to reject such testimony and thus such testimony, if found not to be credible, could, in some instances, be insufficient to support a conviction."

http://thenewspaper.com/news/31/3160.asp

A copy of the decision is available in a 50k PDF file at the source link below.

Source: Barberton v. Jenney (Supreme Court, State of Ohio, 6/3/2010)
http://thenewspaper.com/rlc/docs/2010/oh-visual.pdf



What's most disturbing about this opinion is the cop was proven in court to be INCOMPETENT as a cop and INCOMPETENT as a witness, so his RADAR testimony was stricken as INCOMPETENT, but the court allowed this INCOMPETENT witness to then testilie about ANYTHING ELSE.

This case is not over. APPEAL to fed court! Get an opinion from US Supreme Court.

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 7:06 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by Jongsstraw:
What's next?...$ 1000 fine for smoking in a car??...or $500 fine for changing the radio station in a car? Where does it stop?


Probably not. But they will fine you for smoking while speeding in a car and probably arrest you for changing the radio while driving a car while you are intoxicated.

Today I even sent someone to jail for illegal parking (in a tree while more then twice the legal limit).

H

"Hero. I have come to respect you." "I am forced to agree with Hero here."- Chrisisall, 2009.
"I find those statements amazing. I said I found your remarks 'amazing'" Niki2, 2010.

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 7:10 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:
Here's something you could do, Jong.

Have a friend in the car with you take your picture, with timestamps, as you take off your shirt, put on the seat belt, and then (somehow?) put your shirt on over it. Try to make the illusion as convincing as possible, then drive to the intersection where the sting operation is taking place.

Hopefully one of the cops will try to write you a ticket. This is probably time-stamped as well for a report.

Afterwards, take some pictures again showing that you still had your seatbelt on under your shirt.

Then challenge the fine in court, and lodge a formal complaint about the sting operation.


Such an elaborite setup. Naturally I would respond by pointing out you set this up and probably took the seatbelt off prior to entering the intersection and put it back on after you left.

Then I'd charge you and your friend with conspiracy and obstruction of justice. Not to mention drug abuse (for whatever it you were smoking when you decided this was a good idea).

H

"Hero. I have come to respect you." "I am forced to agree with Hero here."- Chrisisall, 2009.
"I find those statements amazing. I said I found your remarks 'amazing'" Niki2, 2010.

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 7:12 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by piratenews:
Or make a citizens arrest of the cop at any time, using the same procedure as any private security guard arresting shoplifters, or a homeowner arresting a burgler.

Either the judge MUST sign the arrest warrant for the cop, or MUST dismiss all charges against the driver. That's THE LAW.


Yeah, try that one and ignore my evil laugh...

Keep in mind that PN's knowledge of the law is limited to his interaction with Jewish Death Squads camped on his front lawn.

H

"Hero. I have come to respect you." "I am forced to agree with Hero here."- Chrisisall, 2009.
"I find those statements amazing. I said I found your remarks 'amazing'" Niki2, 2010.

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 7:19 AM

BYTEMITE


Theoretically, you might be able to get your friend to get a picture of the interaction with the officer, showing that the seatbelt was still on during the exchange, especially if they weren't in the car with you at the time.

Quote:

Generally, obstruction charges are laid when it is discovered that a person questioned in an investigation, has lied to the investigating officers. However, in most common law jurisdictions, the right to remain silent allows any person questioned by police merely to refuse to answer questions posed by an investigator without giving any reason for doing so.


If they didn't ask if my seat belt was belted, I didn't have to tell them it was.

You might argue that I'm clogging up the legal system by disputing the charges and the officer's ticket, but if I'm accused, that's my right as a taxpayer to dispute it. Don't you presecutors get paid, anyway? Wouldn't you want it to go to trial?

And if the concern is that other people not wearing their seat belts are getting away when the police dealing with me, the police have staked the area out and probably have multiple officers doing the same thing. Most of the other no-seatbelt people probably won't dispute the charges.

Perhaps I'm presupposing that you can only clog something if it's already filled to capacity.

I'd take an obstruction of justice charge, though, if it caused police to look more closely at their practices. That really can't be the best use of their time, either to get funding for their precinct OR to promote public safety.

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 10:18 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:
Theoretically, you might be able to get your friend to get a picture of the interaction with the officer, showing that the seatbelt was still on during the exchange, especially if they weren't in the car with you at the time.


A picture would not be sufficient. You could have put it on while the officer was approaching the vehicle. You would need a record showing, nonstop, the time prior to the contact, the officer's approach, and the contact...if in such a video you were observed wearing a seatbelt, then your not guilty.

An earlier suggestion was made to conceal the seatbelt to somehow entrap the officer. I note for the record that an officer can rely on good faith as a defense to his actions. For example, if you fill an empty beercan with water and then carry it around hoping to get cited for open container violation, the officer can cite you in good faith...and depending on the jurisdiction, prevail in court.
Quote:


If they didn't ask if my seat belt was belted, I didn't have to tell them it was.


True. But if you fail to affirmatively assert your right to remain silent, you waive it. That's the gist of the Thompkins case decided earlier this week by the US Supreme Court (its nice to take old Miranda out and slap her around a bit every decade or so).
Quote:


I'd take an obstruction of justice charge, though, if it caused police to look more closely at their practices. That really can't be the best use of their time, either to get funding for their precinct OR to promote public safety.


Its a waste of their time, you would have wasted their time, you would have wasted the Court's time...and that why I'd fight hard to waste some of your time...in the City jail or maybe doing community service, its summer, maybe you could wash police cars. We like our cars shiny.

H

"Hero. I have come to respect you." "I am forced to agree with Hero here."- Chrisisall, 2009.
"I find those statements amazing. I said I found your remarks 'amazing'" Niki2, 2010.

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 10:45 AM

PIRATENEWS

John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!


Quote:

Originally posted by Hero:

Quote:

Originally posted by piratenews:

Or make a citizens arrest of the cop at any time, using the same procedure as any private security guard arresting shoplifters, or a homeowner arresting a burgler.


Yeah, try that one and ignore my evil laugh...



500 vets with full-auto military assault rifles and dynamite helps:

The Battle of Athens TN 1946
http://www.constitution.org/mil/tn/batathen.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Athens_(1946)

Or just shoot and kill crooked copsters on sight with your AK47, as juries will allow you to do:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&safe=off&q=roane+county+tennessee+s
hootout+jury&aq=f&aqi=&aql=&oq=&gs_rfai
=

Or send copsters to prison for 20 years and sue them for $15-million.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3386531596598980684#

Otherwise expect the psycho copster put a gun to your head and scream nonstop as you drag him handcuffed to a judge for a probable cause hearing, as attorney Joe Levitt discovered on more than 1 occasion in Knoxville TN. Seems cops love arresting sheeple for parking tickets.


PS: "Hero" is the lowest scumbag on planet Earth, as described in the Declaration of Independence. Funny how the jews are stealing his pension and bombing USA with immunity from cowards like him.



Quote:

"Don't get a DUI. When a cop pulls you over..... shoot him!" (crowd cheered wildly)
-Christopher Scum, The Dirty Works, Rebel Scum movie premier, Knoxville Tennessee
http://www.myspace.com/rebelscumthemovie

"Back during Prohibition, when ATF agents went to the mountains to bust stills, they didn't come back. People wouldn't tolerate that oppression. That was before fluoride was added to the water..."
-Police Officer Jack McLamb, Jack McLamb Radio Show, 20 Feb 2010 (his webmaster was sent to prison for infiltrating Bohemian Grove and shooting video as an employee)
http://www.jackmclamb.org

"Rocky Top you'll always be
Home sweet home to me
Good ole Rocky Top, Rocky Top, Tennessee
Rocky Top, Tennessee.
Once two strangers climbed old Rocky Top
Looking for a moonshine still
Strangers ain't come down from Rocky Top
Reckon they never will."
http://www.utk.edu/athletics/tn_songs.shtml

"I'm the guy who pulled the trigger and shot my friend."
-Vice President Dick Cheney, Fox News
youtube.com/watch?v=pR7CH9zvD6s
www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/cheney_doc.html


"I saw two officers as before, who rode up to me, with their pistols in their hands, said God damn you stop, if go an Inch further, you are a dead Man, and swore if we did not turn in to that pasture, they would blow our brains out. Major Mitchel of the 5th Regt clapd his Pistol to my head, and said he was going to ask me some questions, if I did not tell the truth, he would blow my brains out. I told him I esteemed myself a man of truth, that he had stopped me on the highway, & made me a prisoner, I knew not by what right; I would tell him the truth; I was not afraid."
—Paul Revere, owner of RevereWare¨, sworn affidavit: "Memorandum on Events of April 18, 1775" (declassified Top Secret), while under arrest (and subsequent escape) from Redcoat martial-law traffic police at Minute Man National Historic Park, Paul Revere Capture Site, on the eve of the American Revolutionary War and kicking off the Battle of Lexington and Concord, against the army, navy and courts of King George III, heriditary dictator of England who attempted "gun control" by an Assault Weapons Ban of defensive 50-caliber muskets and cannon, Paul Revere's Ride, by David Hackett Fischer



"There's a report out tonight that 24-years ago I was apprehended in Kennebunkport, Maine, for a DUI. That's an accurate story. I'm not proud of that. I oftentimes said that years ago I made some mistakes. I occasionally drank too much and I did on that night. I was pulled over. I admitted to the policeman that I had been drinking. I paid a fine. And I regret that it happened. But it did. I've learned my lesson."
—President George W. Bush, CNN Larry King Live, November 2, 2000
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/bushdui1.html

"Cheney’s first DWI conviction came in November 1962 when he was 21. According to the docket from Cheyenne’s Municipal Court, Cheney was arrested for drunkenness and 'operating motor vehicle while intoxicated.' A Cheyenne Police Judge found Cheney guilty of the two charges and hit him with a 30-day suspension of his driver’s license. Cheney also had to forfeit a $150 bond posted at the time of his arrest. Further information about the case - such as the defendant’s blood alcohol content or whether Cheney was jailed following the arrest - is unavailable since other court records from that period have been destroyed, according to Wyoming officials. Details of Cheney’s second Wyoming arrest in July 1963, have also fallen victim to time and records destruction practices at the local Municipal Court. But a police arrest card maintained by the Rock Springs Police Department shows that Cheney was fined $100 for his second DWI conviction. The card lists the charge against Cheney, who was then working as a groundman laying power lines, as '11-44,' the criminal code classification for drunken driving, according to Police Chief Neil Kourbelas. At the time of the Rock Springs arrest, Kourbelas said that local cops and judges would not have known that young Cheney was a repeat offender. The police department, Kourbelas said, 'wouldn’t have had the ability to automatically check with other jurisdictions to find out if anyone had prior arrests or convictions. We could have arrested Jack the Ripper back then and had no idea what he had done.'”
-Allen Trapp, GaDUIblog.com, Top 50 DUI Arrests of All-Time, February 16, 2007
http://gaduiblog.com/category/dui-arrests-that-made-the-news/top-50-du
i-arrests-of-all-time
/
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/cheney_doc.html

"Shit's gettin way too complicated for me. There are white folks, and then there are ignorant mutherfuckers like you! You can put lipstick on a pig. Sorry ass mutherfucker's got nuttin on me. I inhaled frequently - that was the point. Pot helped, and booze. A little blow when you could afford it. Junkie, pothead. That's where I'd been headed. You ain't my bitch nigger, git your own damn fries!"
-Barack Hussien Obama Soetoro, Dreams From My Father, MP3:
http://www.archive.org/details/ObamaInauguralMashup/





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Thursday, June 3, 2010 11:18 AM

BYTEMITE


Oh lame, screwed mostly by the latest update to the law. But I guess that's what it does, get updated and reinterpretted and have lots of precedences to draw on.

Good game, sir.

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 11:25 AM

BYTEMITE


Quote:

Originally posted by Hero:

Its a waste of their time, you would have wasted their time, you would have wasted the Court's time...and that why I'd fight hard to waste some of your time...in the City jail or maybe doing community service, its summer, maybe you could wash police cars. We like our cars shiny.

H




Ehhh... It's not really a waste of time, because the reason I'm doing it is not because I just wanted to go to court and mess with them, but because I was hoping to figure out a way to challenge the specific legality of this kind of traffic stop, and maybe remove the practice in general. I figured I'd get off on some technicality, then make some argument about what constitutes a routine traffic stop, and improper procedure, and etc. so they'd have to rethink the whole thing. That's what practicing law is supposed to be about, right? I wanted to challenge the law itself... Admittedly, there might be better ways to do that.

But the way it's described, there's only two ways it can happen, the first is that the cops have no vehicles but approach the people without their seat-belts on foot, which is potentially dangerous because this is in an intersection on a red light, and also would hold up traffic for all the other drivers. It might also violate any laws there are defining routine traffic stops.

The other way this would happen is if the cop pulled up in a squad car, which, the only way I could think of where they could do that is if the cop car pulled into the intersection and stopped. Also dangerous. Do cops have to have their lights and sirens going when they stop someone in a car?

Also, the standards about seatbelts, I'd only ever heard that you could get fined for a seatbelt violation if you were pulled over for something else.

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 1:29 PM

FREMDFIRMA



Oh come now, we all know those checkpoints are a scam, a sham, and the same kind of shakedown the mafia used to do on the street in front of speakeasies - does it really matter whether the mafia in question is wearing suits or badges ?

The only damn difference is percieved legitimacy.

And speeding tickets to begin with, hell, all of traffic court, regularly violate the presumption of innocence, using the napoleonic model despite it's illegality, and this is just more fuel for the fire.

So when those charged with upholding the law are in fact worse violators of it than anyone they accuse, then what purpose does the law have other than as an act of tyranny and oppression ?

THAT exact argument came up here in court, during the highwaymen trial, as it became clear during the case that the folks prosecuting it were in fact MORE criminal in their behavior than the highwaymen were !

Problem was, as usual, the jury stacking and internal corruption of our court system (again, Kym Worthy) rendering anything resembling a fair trial around here something of a joke - since in fact the highwaymen were prosecuted for not paying off Worthy's goons.

-Frem
"Every cop is a criminal, and all the sinners, saints..."

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 1:35 PM

PIRATENEWS

John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!


How to make a citizen's arrest at 60mph from the hood of a car:
http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2010/jun/03/waffle-house-worker-calls-pol
ice-hood-car
/

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 2:00 PM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by Jongsstraw:
Even more ridiculous is the TICKET I got yesterday for not wearing a seat belt......$ 115 frikkin' dollars! It's goddamn fascism is what it is.

Yep.
I got two speeding tickets in my life on the road. Fought them both. Won on the first. On the second (many years later) I found they'd had the hole of truth all nicely & legally sewn up. Lost that one, and likely any erroneous one I ever get again.

So Jong, enjoy the fascism, it was there under Bush & it's here under Obama.

Oh, and if you're ever pulled over, remember not to unhook your seat belt to get your wallet until AFTER the officer can plainly see you, or you'll get the same ticket all over again.




The laughing Chrisisall


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Thursday, June 3, 2010 4:05 PM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by piratenews:
Or just shoot and kill crooked copsters on sight with your AK47, as juries will allow you to do:


Or they convict you and hopefully sentence you to death.

http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2010/06/twinsburg_man_guilty_of_killin
.html


H

"Hero. I have come to respect you." "I am forced to agree with Hero here."- Chrisisall, 2009.
"I find those statements amazing. I said I found your remarks 'amazing'" Niki2, 2010.

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 4:13 PM

PIRATENEWS

John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!


Quote:

Originally posted by Hero:

Or they convict you and hopefully sentence you to death.



Spoken like a true Redcoat.

Everybody dies. A coward dies 1,000 deaths, a brave man only once.



“I feel pretty confident that a rape occurred.”"
-Mike Nifong, jailbird, $180-million in debt
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Nifong

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Thursday, June 3, 2010 4:25 PM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by Hero:
An earlier suggestion was made to conceal the seatbelt to somehow entrap the officer. I note for the record that an officer can rely on good faith as a defense to his actions.


But a citizen can't? If I know I wasn't speeding but a police officer says I was - just based on his judgement (or the need for civic revenue) with no backup from radar or other means - I'm considered guilty?

Hmm. So if a cop thought you were guilty of murder, despite no evidence other than his opinion, you'd consider this sufficient for a conviction?

"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Friday, June 4, 2010 2:35 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by Geezer:
But a citizen can't? If I know I wasn't speeding but a police officer says I was - just based on his judgement (or the need for civic revenue) with no backup from radar or other means - I'm considered guilty?


No. Guilt is for the Judge to decide. What the officer has is probable cause to issue the traffic citation. The Magistrate will then hear testimony from both sides including cross examination. They then decide if the State has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that you were speeding.

Make no mistake. Without a laser or radar or some other evidence (like an admission) its still a difficult case. All the Court's ruling indicates means is that the cops word may now be sufficient...in other words a true he said/she that allows the magistrate to make a decision based on who he believes. Just because you might be a lying sack of shit (hypothetically) who can't convince a magistrate your telling the truth...thats now your problem, not mine.

And its not just his word. The Court ruled the officer has to be properly trained in visual speed estimation. The officer must be engaged in traffic enforcement and do that sort of work on a routine basis. So our Chief, for example, could not hop in his car and start writing tickets for speeding because while he has the training...its not his routine duty.

I note for the record that Courts have always (at least for a long, long time) considered lay opinions of speed to be reliable testimony in civil cases. This ruling reflects that patrol officers are more then lay witnesses. They have specific training in visual speed estimation and daily experiance doing that very thing. This makes them experts who can render an expert opinion.

I also note for the trivial record that I recently prosecuted a case against the Defense Attorney who argued this before the Supreme Court. He lost that one too...I'm just sayin.

H

"Hero. I have come to respect you." "I am forced to agree with Hero here."- Chrisisall, 2009.
"I find those statements amazing. I said I found your remarks 'amazing'" Niki2, 2010.

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