Need Tools to Fight Your Speeding Ticket? - For only $29.95 this new ebook contains all of the secrets you need to fight any speeding ticket.
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Can You Afford NOT To Buy This Program? You May Need to Fight a Speeding Ticket in the Future
Labels: fight a speeding ticket
Thursday, June 05, 2008
Fighting a Speeding Ticket: It Really Does Work!
But don't just ask us how it works. See the testimonials Jeff receives from those who have purchased his program and beat the system. Here's one:
"Jeff,
Thank God for your amazing book.
I had less than 10 hrs to prepare and it saved my butt.
Basically, I downloaded your book... Then developed my strategy from my evidence. I used the strategy from pages 34-36 and it worked to a T! I found a discrepancy in the tuning fork serial numbers. One tricky bit was the judge would not accept the evidence without me testifying. It was worth it.
I asked for case dismissed, the judge took 1/2 hr to dismiss my case. The police prosecutor was spitting tacks!"
Thank you,
Alvin Crosby
Labels: fight a speeding ticket
Friday, January 25, 2008
That’s the ticket: More speeding tickets handed out in 2007 than 2006
Straddling his motorcycle, Dan Escott raises his radar gun and takes aim.
A traffic officer with the Naples police department, Escott hasn’t settled into his nook under a tree off Golden Gate Parkway for more than 30 seconds before he spots a car barrelling toward him at 65 mph, 20 mph over the speed limit. Just after 2 p.m., Escott turns his bike, and speeds west in pursuit.
Several minutes and two tickets later -- one for speeding, one for not carrying a driver’s license -- Escott returns to the tree to do it all over again. Not a day goes by that Escott doesn’t ticket at least one speeder along this stretch of road.
“For some reason, this has always been a problem area for us for speeding,” Escott said. “It’s even gotten a little worse since they took the traffic light out (at the Airport-Pulling Road overpass) ... We’re getting some higher speeds.”
Naples police officers wrote 2,608 speeding tickets in 2007, up from 2,468 in 2006. But that’s nothing compared to Collier sheriff’s deputies who wrote 16,060 speeding tickets in 2007, up from 15,217 the year prior.
The Florida Highway Patrol hasn’t finished compiling its traffic statistics from 2007 but reported writing 6,229 speeding tickets in 2006. Marco Island police wrote 70 speeding tickets in 2007, down from 96 in 2006, officials reported.
Labels: fight a speeding ticket, speeding ticket
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
How to Fight That Traffic Ticket
Craig Guillot
If you've ever been ticketed for speeding or running a red light, you already know that the fine you pay may only be the beginning of your cost.
If it's your second offense, that mistake may very well drain a whopping $700 out of your pocket over the next three years. That's because, on average, a driver's insurance premiums can increase by 25 percent after a second violation.
Most traffic courts rely on the fact that nine out of 10 drivers will just pay their tickets and move on. Established to expedite cases quickly and efficiently, traffic courts serve as vital sources of revenue for many counties.
Their desire to get you in and out can work in your favor when fighting a ticket. Attorneys who specialize in traffic court cases have very high dismissal rates based simply on technicalities. In many cases, with a little effort and research you can obtain the same results.
Labels: fight a speeding ticket, traffic ticket
Monday, January 21, 2008
Man faked death to get out of ticket
British police say a motorist attempted to evade a traffic citation by posing as a friend and telling authorities that he was dead.Stop paying for speeding tickets! What do you have to lose? Click here for free information to beat a speeding ticket.
Police said Shafkat Munir presented police with a phony death certificate because he was afraid of losing his license after being caught speeding three times within the space of a few weeks, The Daily Mail reported Monday.
They said Munir claimed to be a friend when he contacted police to tell them there was no way he could have been behind the wheel when the speed-measuring camera took a picture of his car.
However, police questioned the alleged "friend" and he eventually admitted to the deceit.
Now Munir, who would have faced a $350 fine and points on his license for the speeding violations, has been sentenced to 12 months in jail and barred from driving for 18 months.
Labels: beating a ticket, speeding ticket
Tuesday, January 08, 2008
It pays to avoid a speeding ticket -- or fight one
By Chris Solomon
Now is a very bad time to have a lead foot.
With the horsepower wars heating up -- even minivans have 250 horsepower these days -- the country's auto-safety regulators are making it a priority to use high-visibility crackdowns and technology such as traffic cameras to target the worst speeders. Speeding is cited as a factor in approximately one-third of all crash-related fatalities, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says.
With federal regulators pressing states to step up their speeding enforcement, lawmakers in Texas, Illinois and California have added surcharges of as much as $30 on top of fines for speeding.
True, a few more bucks won't change your life, but the fine is usually the least of your worries. Even one speeding ticket can begin to turn your name to mud in your insurer's eyes. More than one can cost you thousands of dollars in higher premiums.
Labels: fight a speeding ticket
Saturday, January 05, 2008
How Can I Fight a Speeding Ticket?
Question: How can I beat a speeding ticket?
Answer: There are three knee-jerk reactions that I have to your question: 1) What about traffic school? 2) I hope the police officer does not show up at the trial, and 3) Don't speed in the first place.
The bottom line is if I knew the answer, I probably would have retired years ago after revealing the secrets in seminars nationwide.
There are lawyers who specialize in handling traffic tickets, and quite a few Web sites of interest that address strategies on dealing with a speeding ticket. The South Bay Bar Association has an excellent lawyer-referral service which you can reach at 310-787-9184.
As to Web sites, I am listing just one here because it is informative and does not appear to promote a particular book or product: www. speedingticketcentral.com/California-speeding-ticket.html.
Also, the Los Angeles Superior Court has details on dealing with traffic court. Visit www.lasuperiorcourt.org. Under "traffic," click "general information," then click either "frequently asked questions" or "options for handling a citation."
Labels: fight a speeding ticket