VA speeding = reckless driving and jail time. HELP!!!
Originally Posted by kaelaria
A few years ago I served a month in jail for a TRAFFIC offence. I got caught speeding and had paid a ticket late prior, and had an unknown bench warrant+suspended license for it. They took me right from court without notice, the judge didn't want to hear any excuse. Believe me you do NOT want to serve time for a traffic offence! The crimes in NO WAY fits the punishment!
Originally Posted by kaelaria
A few years ago I served a month in jail for a TRAFFIC offence. I got caught speeding and had paid a ticket late prior, and had an unknown bench warrant+suspended license for it. They took me right from court without notice, the judge didn't want to hear any excuse. Believe me you do NOT want to serve time for a traffic offence! The crimes in NO WAY fits the punishment!
Originally Posted by ahamos
You will probably not have much trouble getting it bumped down to 79 in a 65, and with a good lawyer, they might even make it 10 over.
The fundamental problem with the law is that it PRESUMES anything over 80 is reckless. If you truly believe this then you should NEVER drive over 80 under any circumstances, as no reasonable people condone reckless driving.
Originally Posted by ahamos
I, too, find my speeds creeping up over 80 all the time, but I've learned how to be extra watchful for Johnny Law.
Earlier I mentioned my recent Georgia speeding ticket. They fuzz was sitting on the county line and popped us for 83 in a 65. On the back of the ticket was a very clear fee schedule for 65/55 zones. 83 worked out to $100. I believe the magic number in Georgia was 100mph. Over that speed was reckless. 99 would have gotten you $300. That is a reasonable ordinance with clearly defined fines. Obviously the officer has the discretion to write a reckless at any speed and then attorneys would likely be involved. The presumption of reckless at 100, as opposed to 80, appears much more reasonable, with MINIs getting a one time 120 exemption!
Give me liberty, or give me death (just don't put me in jail!)
Mike
Originally Posted by ahamos
This is from the Declaration of Independence, not the Constitution.
Originally Posted by ahamos
WTF? A speeding fine is not a tax. It's a fine. A punishment for intentionally violating a plainly stated law.
Originally Posted by ahamos
Perhaps, but who, then, becomes the arbiter of "truly reckless driving"?
Originally Posted by ahamos
And if you shoplift, you'll go through the same. Laws are laws. You break them, you go to jail. Or, better stated: you break them, you accept the risk that you might be caught, and thus must accept any consequence. Nobody made you drive over 80.
Originally Posted by ahamos
I hate speeding fines, too. I think they're retarded. But I'm not about to go around telling people that if I break the law, I think the cops should give me a gold medal and a hand-shake.
Mike
I think part of the problem is some legislators (both state and federal) routinely want to take control away from the local judges and police officers. I see this often in my state (Pennsylvania), which employs one of the largest number of state lawmakers in the country. They apparently need something to do, so they micromanage the local officals with mandatory minimum sentencing and the like.
If you are going 83 in a 65 in a deserted stretch of Virginia highway, and get pulled over, the officer has to lie, in effect, unless he really wants to stick it to you. If an officer knows you weren't reckless, and doesn't want you to see you go to jail, he either has to write simply "excessive speed" or make up a number so that you are punished justly, but not over punished. In other states, if you are truely driving recklessly, the officer has to write a separate citation if not arrest you on the spot.
That's similar to what happens in court, when a judge wants to show mercy but is handcuffed from doing so because of mandatory minimums.
If you are going 83 in a 65 in a deserted stretch of Virginia highway, and get pulled over, the officer has to lie, in effect, unless he really wants to stick it to you. If an officer knows you weren't reckless, and doesn't want you to see you go to jail, he either has to write simply "excessive speed" or make up a number so that you are punished justly, but not over punished. In other states, if you are truely driving recklessly, the officer has to write a separate citation if not arrest you on the spot.
That's similar to what happens in court, when a judge wants to show mercy but is handcuffed from doing so because of mandatory minimums.
Originally Posted by ZenAudio
This is exactly what is wrong with the law. The need for attorneys to "bump" the offense down to 79 or 10 over is simply disengenuous. Soofle admits he was going 83, and he should pay a reasonable fine, say $100-$300 dollars (or traffic court) assuming he wasn't being truly reckless. Instead, his lawyers need to cut some back room deal to plea bargain his offense down to something that better fits the "crime". This proves that the law is a bad law.
Originally Posted by ZenAudio
The fundamental problem with the law is that it PRESUMES anything over 80 is reckless. If you truly believe this then you should NEVER drive over 80 under any circumstances, as no reasonable people condone reckless driving.
This is why I am surprised at your position on the law. I'm assuming you do not believe you are being reckless at these speeds. If you are reckless, then you do deserve the $2500 fine and some jail time. More likely, you believe that if caught, you should pay a fine more along the lines I have suggested above.
This is why I am surprised at your position on the law. I'm assuming you do not believe you are being reckless at these speeds. If you are reckless, then you do deserve the $2500 fine and some jail time. More likely, you believe that if caught, you should pay a fine more along the lines I have suggested above.
Originally Posted by ZenAudio
Earlier I mentioned my recent Georgia speeding ticket. They fuzz was sitting on the county line and popped us for 83 in a 65. On the back of the ticket was a very clear fee schedule for 65/55 zones. 83 worked out to $100. I believe the magic number in Georgia was 100mph. Over that speed was reckless. 99 would have gotten you $300. That is a reasonable ordinance with clearly defined fines. Obviously the officer has the discretion to write a reckless at any speed and then attorneys would likely be involved. The presumption of reckless at 100, as opposed to 80, appears much more reasonable, with MINIs getting a one time 120 exemption!
I said before that I think Virginia is responding to some external pressure. Whether it's federal pressure to reduce accidents or MothersAgainstDumbDrivers or whatever, the commonwealth decided to crack down hard on moving infractions.
Originally Posted by ZenAudio
Speed traps and quotas are set up to generate revenue for local municipalities.
Quotas are illegal.
Originally Posted by ZenAudio
How about a reasonable fine and a "slow down" admonition.
There's another little thing about my fine state that's being overlooked, here, and it could turn into a wonderful topic all on its own:
Virginia is the source of something like 50% of all the guns used in violent crimes in New York.
We have historically had a serious problem with New York / New Jersey residents coming down to VA, buying a bunch of guns, and then hauling a** back North. A lot of our selective targeting of out-of-staters has to do with controlling secondary criminal activity, or so I've been told.
I do, of course, recognize that if you're not local, you're less likely to appear in court, which makes you more likely to just accept the fine. That stinks, and I've fallen victim to it, myself (73 in a 55, 5 hours from home). I just sent the court a check. It wasn't worth my time to fight it, but my fine was only $84.
BTW, I don't equate anything with 56 in a 55. VA generally works on a 10% or 9 over indemnity. And, the cops here won't entrap you. If you get blown off the road by a cop doing 85, follow him. He can't stop you, unless his lights were already on.
Update
I've hired a lawyer who is going to (presumably) attempt to talk the prosecutor into reducing the ticket to 80 flat so I can just pay a fine and be on my merry way. If that doesnt work he'll be asking for an extension on my court date to give him and me time to put together some kind of defense to hopefully convince the judge to reduce the charge. Meantime I'm off to my local MINI dealer to see if by some miracle my speedometer reads a few mph slow (i only need it to be off by 3) in which case im basically off the hook for reckless and have nothing to worry about besides a small fine. The beauty of this is that even a brand new car is generally not perfectly calibrated and I have 7k on my tires so they shouldnt be too badly worn yet. The down side is that they may tell me my speedo is reading high not low in which case it wont help me in the least.
We have historically had a serious problem with New York / New Jersey residents coming down to VA, buying a bunch of guns, and then hauling a** back North. A lot of our selective targeting of out-of-staters has to do with controlling secondary criminal activity, or so I've been told.


























Originally Posted by soofle
Meantime I'm off to my local MINI dealer to see if by some miracle my speedometer reads a few mph slow (i only need it to be off by 3) in which case im basically off the hook for reckless and have nothing to worry about besides a small fine. The beauty of this is that even a brand new car is generally not perfectly calibrated and I have 7k on my tires so they shouldnt be too badly worn yet. The down side is that they may tell me my speedo is reading high not low in which case it wont help me in the least.
Originally Posted by soofle
Meantime I'm off to my local MINI dealer to see if by some miracle my speedometer reads a few mph slow (i only need it to be off by 3) in which case im basically off the hook.
...but in the end, it's the Troopers' radar gun speed reading that counts, no?
Originally Posted by mburchill36
...but in the end, it's the Troopers' radar gun speed reading that counts, no?
Originally Posted by ZenAudio
The problem with these types of laws are that they are ARBITRARY and the punishment may not fit the offense.
Traffic laws are not arbitrary but the property of each State (you know, "State's Rights". If you look over the list of states, some don't care how fast your going, others, like Virginia, care a great deal.
If you don't like a law, write to your local representative at the state level. Also take notice of VA sending ppl to jail for doing over 90.
VA's 80 is actually +15 on the Interstate making it the "toughest" law
Originally Posted by chows4us
See http://www.mit.edu/~jfc/laws.html#absolute
Traffic laws are not arbitrary but the property of each State (you know, "State's Rights". If you look over the list of states, some don't care how fast your going, others, like Virginia, care a great deal.
If you don't like a law, write to your local representative at the state level. Also take notice of VA sending ppl to jail for doing over 90.
VA's 80 is actually +15 on the Interstate making it the "toughest" law
Traffic laws are not arbitrary but the property of each State (you know, "State's Rights". If you look over the list of states, some don't care how fast your going, others, like Virginia, care a great deal.
If you don't like a law, write to your local representative at the state level. Also take notice of VA sending ppl to jail for doing over 90.
VA's 80 is actually +15 on the Interstate making it the "toughest" law
Peace,
Mike
Originally Posted by ZenAudio
How fast does traffic really flow on a Virginia interstate? ... And I feel sorry for you if you own a MINI there, because I derive a whole lot of joy in mine over 80!
I've driven I95 in VA many times so here is some real life experience.
Way, way back, the AAA maps would specifically mark the areas around Emporia, VA as major speed traps, DO NOT speed.
First, you got to remember I95 is the major drug corridor from FL to NY
Second, VA is really Old South and remember the war
Speed limit is 65. I traveled down to Mrytle Beach, SC last Sept and speed flowed at about 70. There is no way anyone was doing 85.
There is a reason that VA is the ONLY state in the union to ban radar detectors (again State Rights).
I'm not saying its good or bad, but rather, its just the way it is
motor carefully!
Originally Posted by chows4us
VA is really Old South and remember the war
Traffic (in Richmond) usually flows 70 - 75.
Traffic on I95 between Richmond and DC usually flows between 80 and 95 -- if it flows at all. It's absurd, I know, but I've heard of people around DC getting tickets for speeding, but not because they were going too fast: they were going too slow! If traffic is moving at 80, and you're doing 70 in an area that congested, then you are a problem on the road.
Sometimes the rules don't make sense when applied to the real world.
will this work?
Since Michigan does not participate in the DLC or the NRVC there aren't any consequences if you don't show up to court in VA ...unless you get stopped in VA again
...at which time they will promptly take you to jail
...at which time they will promptly take you to jail
Originally Posted by ZenAudio
Anyone who would only post overly PC drivel would never drive a MINI.

Originally Posted by ZenAudio
Kaeleria, maybe you could edit your post to change the reference to Klingons, but that could upset a Trekkie.

By Single Combat! Pull out your nasty twin-bladed thingy, utter some awful multisyllabic epithets, and cleave your opponent in two! Reminds me of when folks would use duels and affronts to their honor to eliminate less physically-skilled opponents they couldn't defeat in a more conventional fashion.
And as a German-American, I'm not particularly fond of the term "****" being bandied about, either.
Cheers,
Matthew Z.
Originally Posted by Dr Obnxs
I got a nasty speed contest in my Mustang. I did speed, 35 in a 25, but that was about it. I found that my particluar version of speed contest was 24 hrs in jail, $1000 fine, and 6 months suspension, all minimums. My laywer cost 2 grand, but I got a limit line (tires over the white line on a stop) violation for 1 point and $110 court fees.
I live in CA, but make sure you know how the locality works. In CA, we get HOSED on insurance rates if we get bad tickets etc. The lawyers fees are small compared to what the rate jump would be. It MAY be that you can do OK there on your own, but you should know before you go there.
Matt
I live in CA, but make sure you know how the locality works. In CA, we get HOSED on insurance rates if we get bad tickets etc. The lawyers fees are small compared to what the rate jump would be. It MAY be that you can do OK there on your own, but you should know before you go there.
Matt
For 10 miles over the limit??
And I thought denying you traffic school if you exercised your right to contest a ticket was bad! (BTW, that sounds like a local rule; I don't think the CA statutes say that, do they?)
Did this happen to you in CA, Dr. Obnxs? I've got to stay away from there!
As for the VA stiff laws, that bites! I lived in VA for 12 years, and got a couple speeding tickets. It used to be that 20 mph over the limit was automatically reckless -- which, fortunately, I never did -- but it wasn't nearly so harsh a punishment. Sounds like up to 12 mos. is/would be a bit overboard, especially if your record is clean. (I'm assuming your 4-yr-old points have aged off your driving record by now?)
Maybe they want to reserve the ability to really make a statement to chronic excessive speeders.
Is the reckless ticket really punished the same as DUI/DWI in VA? That's saying something, ain't it? And it ain't a good something about VA's priorities!
Anyway, thanks for the heads up. Next time I'm in VA, I'll be more careful. I usually go about 9 over in the 55 and 65 zones.
Good luck, Soofle.
Originally Posted by ahamos
Constitutional rights are something I don't play around with. A lot of people believe they possess a bunch of entitlements, and that laws somehow rob them of those entitlements.
If he was kidding, I apologize, but I didn't read a bit of jest in that statement -- just sarcasm.
No person is entitled to drive. Driving is not a right, it is a privilege.
Begin flames now...
If he was kidding, I apologize, but I didn't read a bit of jest in that statement -- just sarcasm.
No person is entitled to drive. Driving is not a right, it is a privilege.
Begin flames now...

Yep, no right to drive, and no right to exceed the speed limit, either. But, 12 months in jail for going 18 miles over the limit at 0330 with no traffic around? Seems a bit excessive, although it is just part of the possible sentencing range; and, in fact, not too many things qualify as cruel & unusual under the Constitution.
Originally Posted by NinerCat
I could be wrong, but I personally thought it was a reference to the not-being-deprived-of-liberty-without-due-process part ...
Yep, no right to drive, and no right to exceed the speed limit, either. But, 12 months in jail for going 18 miles over the limit at 0330 with no traffic around? Seems a bit excessive, although it is just part of the possible sentencing range; and, in fact, not too many things qualify as cruel & unusual under the Constitution.
Yep, no right to drive, and no right to exceed the speed limit, either. But, 12 months in jail for going 18 miles over the limit at 0330 with no traffic around? Seems a bit excessive, although it is just part of the possible sentencing range; and, in fact, not too many things qualify as cruel & unusual under the Constitution.
I think most people who go into court pleasantly and courteously will come out OK, and the guy who spits at the judge will get the maximum.
Final Update:
By Single Combat! Pull out your nasty twin-bladed thingy, utter some awful multisyllabic epithets, and cleave your opponent in two!
Cheers,
Matthew Z.
Gas to get to Classic Mini from Flint MI: $36
Lawyer fees: $437
Speeding fine, court fee, processing fee: $137
Not listening to Bubba tell me I have a "Purty Maowth" from the next shower stall: PRICELESS
Some things in life can't be bought, for everything else, there's pure dumb luck.


