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Looking for speeding ticket tips and insurance suggestions 

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8th-Jun-2009 01:13 pm
Palm 2 Face
Yesterday, I got my first speeding ticket. I was going up I-24 from Murfreesboro to Nashville, and somewhere around 840, I was pulled over. The officer, a Tennessee State Trooper, said I was going 88mph in a 70 and gave me a ticket of $264.85. I don't think I can dispute the speed as I can't remember what my speedometer said at the time. I was in the left-hand lane, which was pretty open at the time. Needless to say though, it put a damper on an otherwise good day.

So now I'm looking for tips on what to do. I called the general sessions court in Murfreesboro to reaffirm what the trooper said. I can take a driving course to have the ticket wiped off my record, but I would still have to pay the ticket and this is only if a judge decides to allow this (both things the trooper neglected to mention when offering the alternative).

I have a court date of August 28. Why it's over two months away, I don't know. Busy ticketing season? I really don't know what to do in court aside from dressing nice and acting polite, as it would be my first time as an actual defendant, so I don't know anything that may cause the judge to have leniency. I'm open to any tips about that.

Since I'm moving out of Murfreesboro by the end of July, going back home to Madison, I'm thinking of seeing if my court date could be pushed up. This apparently flies in the face of the speeding ticket googling I've been doing that says to delay, delay, delay the court date. If anyone wants to weigh in on that, feel free to comment.

On another note, being the responsible son that I am, I called my dad to tell him I got a speeding ticket later that afternoon (actually called about an hour after but he didn't pick up then). There was the expected disappointed but somewhat understanding tone, aside from some BS he said about him never going that fast. My stepmom, however, got the phone and in a very condescending tone said that she's taking the car away by mid July. Her main point was that I'm going to be off her insurance now that I've graduated and that I need to get my own. This is something I've known. I just didn't need to hear it in such a disdainful, unhelpful-sounding mood. I can understand it though, with the car being in her name and me getting a ticket from a camera catching the car running a red light just two months prior. Still, it sounded like such a bad attitude that I had my initial reaction to whenever I hear her in that tone: to become frustrated, talk as little to her as possible in order to mitigate further frustration and anger and then spend time complaining about it (like I am here I guess.

That last part was just venting. If anyone has any suggestions on how to proceed with my ticket and my day in court, or if anyone has any good suggestions for a cheap car insurance carrier, feel free to post those in the comments.
Comments 
8th-Jun-2009 07:55 pm (UTC)
There's not a lot you can do. Short of trying to dispute the ticket, you're just stuck paying it. You can delay, and if you go to court you will force the cop to show up. There is a chance that if he does not show up the judge will dismiss the ticket. This is a little more likely if you push for things like the records from either the radar or lidar gun used to track your speed.

Was the cop stationary? Was he pacing you? Was he on your side of the road? There are actually very specific laws in place over what is and is not an acceptable and legal means of clocking you. Cops that flag people over without using any kind of equipment are completley bunk. Some states do not allow lidar, others ONLY allow it. Some permit pacing as an acceptable means of determining speed, others do not.

If you feel like doing some research, you may be able to get "your day in court". But even then there's an entirely different bank of headaches. Ask Lucas on that one...

If I were you I'd just pay the ticket, fuck the court date (it's a waste of your time) and apply for the traffic school. I don't think you have to go to court to apply for the school. BTW - for males when we turn 25 our risk goes down and insurance gets a lot cheaper.
8th-Jun-2009 08:14 pm (UTC)
I don't know if the car was stationary or in motion. It was behind me with lights on before I noticed, but I would guess stationary on my side of the road as a trooper usually likes to sit at that spot. He marked radar on the form with the initials SF. Not sure what that means.

I don't see a real way to argue my way out of it. According to the clerk at the general sessions court though, I have to see a judge to see if he'll allow me to take the driving test. I want to do the test so I won't get the ticket on my record. I know there is an off chance the trooper may not show up to court, but I'm not counting on it.

I should have known better as I know troopers like to hide out there, but I had been driving a lot and not sleeping as much as I'd like over the weekend. I can't in good conscience or certainty say I wasn't going that fast, and I have no evidence of malpractice on the trooper's part, so I basically have to bite the bullet.
9th-Jun-2009 09:19 pm (UTC)
I don't know how that court system works, but if I were you I would just give them a call now, just to see what your options are and if they have any way to allow you to move the court date, take care of it early, whatever it is. Then just go from there.

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