I Beat my Speeding Ticket
Way back in July of this year just after a long road-trip up to Canada and back, I was just driving around local roads in Montclair when I got caught in a popular speed trap on Bellevue Ave. It’s on a downhill stretch of road where the speed limit is 25 MPH, but everyone drives 35+. That particular day I forgot to pump the brakes and a cop pulled me over and issued me a speeding ticket.
After some research online I found a lot of sites that offer techniques to beat speeding tickets and after reading some other articles online (like this one) I decided to try my luck in court.
I purchased the services of SpeedTicketBeaters.com. They gave me a set of instructions to follow and some case law to back myself up. Turns out that I didn’t even need any of this stuff since the officer, and at one point even the prosecutor, weren’t present for me to go to trial. So my case was dismissed. This apparently happens all the time, and is a good reason to always plead not guilty when you receive a ticket.
It’s unfortunate I didn’t go to trial though because I believe I still would have won the case. That is because the area I was ticketed really is a speed trap. The law states that the township is supposed to measure the average speed of vehicles on every road every five years to determine the appropriate speed limit. This is called a speed survey. Montclair and Bloomfield have essentially violated this, putting a blanket 25 MPH speed limit all over the place, even though no one drives that slow. This is not lawful for a town to do so. They are supposed to put the speed at what 85% of the average drivers drive on that road. Thus practically the whole town is a speed trap, and then they rake in the money issuing lots of speeding tickets that almost everyone (except annoying pests like me) just pay. Resulting in revenues for not just the town but also the insurance companies that raise your rates.
So the next time you get a speeding ticket try fighting it. You may very well win!
Although I am happy for you that you got out of paying your ticket, I have to say that if you look at the statistics, driving slower vastly reduces your chances of killing a pedestrian if you hit them than driving faster. And in a smallish town/city where there are peds perhaps going the speed limit isn’t the worst thing in the world to do . . .
Comment by Elizabeth — December 5, 2009 @ 1:22 pmYou’re missing the point. NO ONE goes the speed limit on that street- it’s a speed trap, and the cops are taking full advantage of it to increase their own revenues. Now I always drive down that street at 25 MPH and I get tailed pretty badly most of the time.
Comment by davidv — December 21, 2009 @ 7:54 pm