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Fight Your Speeding Tickets

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发表于 2013-9-3 10:29:00 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
本帖最后由 小股民 于 2013-9-4 10:35 编辑

a document dedicated to helping people fight speeding tickets

Disclaimer
This is not legal advice. The author of FYST is not responsible for any loss, damages, convictions or fines as a result of using this article or any content in this document. Use at the reader's risk. Please consult a lawyer if in doubt. This advice is only worth exactly how much it costs you.

1.0 So, you are caught. What do you plead?
You have been pulled over. You can see clearly from the mirror that the red and blue lights are flashing on the cop car. Your hands are sweating, and your heart is pounding. A lot of things are going on in your mind.
So finally the cop hands you the ticket, and he conveniently included an envelope, too (so you can more quickly pay up). What do you plead? Guilty or not guilty? There are three options:


1. Plead guilty - payment out of court
This option is for those who enjoy random forms of taxation, as if they haven't paid enough income tax (starting from 17%), property tax, sales taxes (7% GST and 8% PST in Ontario, on almost everything from candies to houses), liquor tax, air tax, you name it.
2. Plead guilty with an explanation
Essentially the same as option 1. But you get to explain your situation to a justice of the peace, and hopefully if you face a sympathetic one you will get your fine reduced a bit and have more time to pay.
However you should realize that the judge cannot reduce the number of km/h over on the charge nor change the charge.
3. Plead not guilty - trial option
Why should you plead not guilty? Because:
• if you appear on trial, the cop might not show up, and the ticket is automatically dismissed;
• if the cop does show up, with some preparation, you have a chance to win the case;
• in the worst case, if you lose, it is good education to learn how court works. Just think of it as a legal course fee.

DON'T JUST PAY UP! At least, if you chose option 2, you can reduce the fine a bit and have longer time
to pay. However, if you care about insurance premium surcharges after the conviction, don't even think about pleading guilty (option 1 or 2). The insurance industry don't care how many km/h over you commited, nor do they care how much fine you paid. All they care is the NUMBER of convictions on your driving record.
If you have been convicted for speeding 1 km/h over and paid $60 fine, you are classified as a "high risk dangerous driver" same as the other guy who is 30 km/h over and paid $200. Choosing option 1 or 2 means that you agree with what's being charged against you, and a conviction will be entered. Note that even if you choose option 2, the judge can't reduce the number of km/h over on the charge nor change the charge.
Considering the insurance premium increase, you have no reason why you shouldn't plead not guilty. The stain stays on your record for 3 (three) years. (Demerit points on your license stay for 2 years.) If you are faced with JUST a $100 increase in premium per year, you are paying over $300 extra for this ticket alone.
Of course, insurance companies aren't THAT generous.
Remember, it is nothing unethical about pleading not guilty even if you really did it. Technically speaking, pleading not guilty is merely exercising your right to question the prosecution's evidence. You are innocent until there is evidence to prove you guilty. Unfortunately, the traffic court system has turned into a money making system and you have to prove yourself innocent. If enough people fight it this revenue generating
system will collapse. At least, if you fight your ticket, the cop has to go to court and there is one less cop out there writing tickets for the day. If everyone fights their tickets then cops either will have to get off streets or  be absent from courts. You are not wasting police forces by getting them to courts. Police forces are already wasted by running speed traps in the middle of a highway, unable to respond to emergency dispatch quickly enough. Imagine if your house is being robbed, or your car is being stolen, or your daughter is being raped, and all police officers are too tied up running speedtraps hidden behind a bush, with a radar gun and a cup of coffee in his hands and a donut in his mouth, unable to assist you. By abolishing the ridiculous speed limits police forces can then be restored to do more useful tasks, such as... you guess it... catching real criminals. Please, do everyone a favour, fight your ticket.

 楼主| 发表于 2013-9-3 10:31:58 | 显示全部楼层
本帖最后由 小股民 于 2013-9-4 10:45 编辑

2.0 You have pleaded not guilty. What's next?
The moment you receive the ticket, quickly write down all the details of it. Make a photocopy if possible,
then verify that all information is correct. (More on this later if something is incorrect.)

So you have circled option 3 on the ticket, checked the box "YES, I want to challenge the prosecution's evidence", signed it and handed it to the court clerk. What you do now is wait for the court date to arrive in the mail. Meanwhile, start preparing your case early, when everything is still fresh in your mind. Go to the place where you were cited. Take note of all the buildings, trees, road signs etc. If there are any power lines, telephone lines and neon lights, make note of these, too. If the place is not familiar to you, you can take some pictures of it. The pictures might not be usable in court, but they can remind you of that place and the surroundings. Obtain a map or draw one by yourself, and indicate the location of these important things on the map. In the case where the trial will be scheduled a few months away, it is also a good idea to write down the date, time, location, weather condition, traffic density and other such important things because we tend to forget them as time flies by.
There is one more thing you need to do, although not entirely related to fighting the ticket, is to change your insurance company. That's right, if you don't want your insurance premium to skyrocket in case you are convicted. How does your company find out about your ticket you may ask. Insurance companies rely on the Ministry of Transportation to report any moving violations that you may have, and this is done when demerit points are applied to your license. Demerit points are applied to your license when you pay your fine. But how does the Ministry of Transportation know which insurance company you are with? Remember when you renew your vehicle plate stickers? You have to report your insurance company and policy number while you renew your plates. That's how the MOT knows which insurance company you are with. There is a bit of timing you can take advantage of, because the law only requires you to disclose your insurance information every time you renew your plates, whether it is one year or two years. As long as you have proof of valid insurance, you can change insurance companies as many times as you like, without telling the MOT until the next time you renew your plates. Before then, the MOT would still have your "old" insurance information and will report the violations to your old insurance company, therefore, keeping your present record clean. Having said all these, it becomes clear that it is highly recommended to have your annual insurance renewal date fall on the month after your birthday. The reason is, all vehicle owners in Ontario get
to renew their plates the last day of the month which they were born, and at that time they also get to report their insurance information. Having the insurance expiry/renewal date fall on the month after, you can change insurance companies and the MOT will essentially always have old information. You heard it here at FYST first.

3.0 Should you hire a lawyer?

This is entirely your call. If you are facing a loss of license, don't take any chances. Hire a lawyer. If you are facing a possible jail term, hire a lawyer. Since we are only dealing with speeding tickets here, it is not likely that you will be thrown to jail, unless you are charged with 200km/h in a 60kmh zone. In which case, it is reckless driving and you should be facing a loss of license anyway. If you are charged with a normal speeding offence, it is up to you whether to hire a lawyer or not. The services of a lawyer are not cheap, and you and I are not famous football players. You should calculate how much a lawyer and the speeding ticket will cost you ultimately before calling one.
If the face value of the ticket is $100, plus the insurance premium increase of $300 over three years, provided that you don't get any speeding tickets in this 3-year period, this ticket costs you $400. If you hire a lawyer, does he charge you more than $400? If yes, you can forget it. You'd be better off without a lawyer. If he charges less than $400, then you should consider the chance of winning. Since you are the one who has the clearest memory of what happened in the citation, you should evaluate how likely you will win if you go to trial. If you are certain that you will win (e.g. fatal error on ticket), go without a lawyer. If you are not 100% certain that you will win, but quite confident anyway, (e.g. radar-backed speeding ticket on a busy highway and you are only one among a sea of cars) go for a lawyer. You don't want to spoil your chances. If you believe that you have little chance of winning, it is usually not worth the cost of hiring a lawyer. Lawyer fees plus the fine and the insurance premium surcharges will cost you a lot.
Often, in a minor traffic offence, a paralegal could be a better choice. Besides the much cheaper fees, they often advertise a "No win, don't pay" policy. If you are all set to battle it out, a paralegal makes much more sense since you don't have any more to lose. However you should be aware that in any offence that is a little more serious than "minor", a paralegal who will only fight might not act to your best interest. The reason is
that plea bargain becomes a much more attractive option when fighting it all out is getting risky.


Finally, if you plan to use the "Defense of Necessity" strategy (discussed later), hire a real lawyer.
Of course, when you hire a lawyer, make sure that he/she specializes in traffic-related cases. You don't want a real-estate specialist to represent you in a traffic court.
Read on, if you don't want to hire a lawyer. The rest of the material is written for you.

 楼主| 发表于 2013-9-3 10:33:26 | 显示全部楼层
4.0 Before going to court
So finally the court notice has arrived in your mail. Before you start doing anything, you should change
your court date. I'm not afraid to tell you right upfront that, most traffic cases are won by dismissal due to
no-show of the police officer. If you change your court date, you increase your chance that the cop will not
show up. The reason is, the initial court date that you get assigned is the cop's court appearance day. All of
his tickets written in the past month or so will get to be dealt with in that court day, so he WILL show up.
If you change it to some odd day, it might conflict with his vacation, or he might be on course, or he just
simply forgets, you'll never know. You may even specify your preference of what day of the week you wish
your court date to be on. From common sense, cops are more reluctant to go to court on Friday afternoons
and Monday mornings, particularly near long weekends. Plan your court date carefully.
When you receive your new court date, you'd better start preparing your case seriously. Go to your local
library and find information about the specifics of your court. If you have time, you may borrow some law
books on the topic of traffic offences. There you will find a lot more information and previous case laws, but
the shortcoming to these books is that they are written for lawyers. You may find them containing plenty of
law jargons. However, with some background knowledge after reading this page, you will find these books
very valuable to help you fight your ticket. The best chance of finding these law books is from a university
library, especially a university with a law school. You might have very little luck in a local or municipal
library. Here are some very good books to read:
1. "The Law of Traffic Offences",
by Scott C. Hutchison & John G. Marko, published by Carswell, 1989.
2. "The Law on Speeding and Radar",
by A. Shakoor Manraj & Paul D. Haines, published by Butterworths, 1991.
The reason why you should read on some of the law books is that these contain a gold mine of information.
You may have noticed that the actual official law book, the Highway Traffic Act, is very vague in a lot of
respects. For example, it doesn't say anything about using radar to detect speed. There are no written laws
which says how a police officer should be trained in order to be a qualified radar operator. These laws are
established, through a rather "non-standard" way, by previous relevant cases. These laws are called "case
laws". They are essentially decisions made by Judges or Justices in the past, which will be referenced by
later court cases of the same nature. The above two suggested books contain a lot of those relevant case laws,
which will be very useful for your defence.
The next thing to do is to file a motion to the Provincial Prosecutor's office to request a disclosure of the
prosecution's evidence. You have every right to see what the prosecution has against you. When you request
a disclosure, be very specific of what you need. Just saying "please send me your evidence that you will be
relying upon" will result in a lot of important information missing from the disclosure. If the prosecutor
receives something like this, the most they would do is make a copy of the ticket (if you are lucky you may
get both sides of the officer's copy ) and send it to you, which you may already have. You should be very
specific. Make a short list if possible. Here is a list of "must haves" if you intend to win:
•  both sides of the officer's copy of the ticket
•  the make, model, and serial number of the radar unit, and its owner's manual
•  the officer's training record specific to the said radar unit
•  the calibration record and repair history of the said radar unit
•  the records of any calibration equipment such as tuning forks
•  the officer's log on the alleged offence day, including all tickets he had written on that day
If you ask for the radar manual, they will say this is copyrighted material and will refuse to send it to you.
However, you can ask for the brand, model and manufacturer of the radar unit used in the citation, and
contact the manufacturer yourself.


One important note is, when you send any motion to the Prosecutor's office, make sure you send it by
registered mail. This way they cannot claim that they have never received it because they must sign for it. If
they failed to send you the information you requested, or the disclosure is incomplete, you can send a second
motion requesting the missing information. If it also fails after the second attempt you should bring out this
issue to the justice of the peace on the day of the trial, and move for a dismissal due to a lack of disclosure.
Remember to bring your receipt from the post office.
Carefully examine the officer's notes and see what he has written down. You might have a hard time reading
his hand writing, as this is not intended for anyone but himself to read. If you didn't make a big mess when
he pulled you over, he is not likely to write much down. Do this well in advance to allow yourself ample
time to prepare your case. Prepare your questions for cross-examination of the cop, and ask a friend to
practise it with you a few times. If you have time, attend some court sessions as a spectator to see how
proceedings work.
(See Appendix B on how to prepare for the trial)
What if you have waited for a very long time but never receive the court date? Or what if your trial date is
scheduled months away from the date you were cited? This is very good for you. Under the
Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms
, ANY PERSON CHARGED WITH AN OFFENCE HAS THE RIGHT TO
BE TRIED WITHIN A REASONABLE TIME. No matter what, you are in a very good position indeed.
Although there is no absolute time limit of the delay of your trial, previous court cases, namely the famous
Askov case law, have indicated that the court has violated your right if you are scheduled more than 8 months
away. That explains why you have to fight every traffic ticket in order to jack up the cases the courts
have to handle. If everything is so backed up, all motorists are looking at a very bright future.


(Example of a disclosure request)
(Your address,
telephone number)
(Date)
Provincial Prosecutor's Office
(Address - copy from ticket or notice of trial)
Dear Sir/Madam,
I am scheduled to appear in courtroom #______ on _______, at ________(AM/PM) to answer to a charge of
__________________________________________________.
Please provide complete disclosure of the case against me, with the following items:
1. both sides of the officer's copy of the ticket;
2. the make, model, and serial number of the radar unit, and its owner's manual;
3. the officer's training record specific to the said radar unit;
4. the calibration record and repair history of the said radar unit;
5. the records of any calibration equipment such as tuning forks;
6. the officer's log on the alleged offence day, including all tickets he/she had written on that day,
and any document the Crown may rely on at trial.
As I am sure you realize, I require timely disclosure in order to make full answer and defence to the charge.
Thank you for your assistance, and please send me all the information to the above address.
Sincerely yours,
_____________________
(Your name and signature)




 楼主| 发表于 2013-9-3 10:34:29 | 显示全部楼层
5.0 The court date
You can't sleep last night. Because today is your court date. You should not dress too formally when you go
to a traffic court. A T-shirt and a pair of jeans will do, as long as they are neat and not torn. Arrive early so
you have a chance to study other people's similar traffic cases and learn how court proceedings work if you
haven't already done so.
There are a few things you have to remember when you attend a court session:
• Do not talk in the spectator area;
• Do not wear a hat;
• Stand up when the judge enters or leaves the courtroom;
• Bow to the judge when you enter or leave the courtroom;
• Always address the judge as "Your Worship" or "Your Honour". Don't call him/her "you";
• Show your respect. If you act like a 5-year-old kid, it will only make you look like a jerk and it is
definitely not to your advantage;
• Video and/or audio recordings are not allowed. Unobstrusive hand written notes for educational purposes
is however permitted in the courtroom (if you are the defendant, you need to take notes).
Unlike the court sessions you normally see in movies, traffic courts are pretty informal. You are expected to
be treated leniently, and sometimes you, the judge and the prosecution will involve in 3-way conversations
during the trial. Chances are, most of the defendants in the court room know about court procedures less than
you. Showing your etiquette in court will impress the judge.
Plea bargain:
In some courts, in order to save time and costs, the prosecution may offer plea bargain prior to the trial. It's
your call to accept this. In a plea bargain, you and the prosecution work out what charges satisfy both
parties, instead of taking the case through the whole process of a trial. If you want to plea bargain with the
prosecution, you may do it after the court opens for admission and before the judge enters the courtroom.
Normally, if you are charged reckless driving, you can admit a speeding offence but plead not guilty to the
more serious offence. The prosecution may or may not accept this depends on the situation and their
evidence. Some courts even allow a speeding charge to be bargained down to a seatbelt violation. I don't
think Ontario will accept this, but it happens in the US. After all, they are more interested in your money
than anything else. If you agree to pay up in some form or another, they are equally happy.
If you are more concerned with the insurance premium increase, it is better to just take it to court and beat it
down. To the insurance industry, it is the number of convictions that counts. Unless you are facing a loss of
license, it is worth the risk of rejecting the plea bargain and taking it to trial.
The players:
When you go to court, you have to know who is who and who does what. The players include:
• The judge - usually in a provincial offences court, this person is called a Justice of the Peace ("Justice").
A Justice does not practise law, does not have a law degree, but has a certain amount of legal training.
He/she is a lay person, just like you. A Justice should be addressed to as "Your Worship". When you
are in a higher appeal court, you will be facing a Provincial Judge, who practises law and has a law
degree. A Provincial Judge should always be addressed to as "Your Honour". Throughout this article we
will simply call this player the judge. He/she will preside the court and make rulings. The judge will sit
at the judge's bench located in the front middle of the court room.
• The court reporter - this person handles the documents for the judge and make tape recordings of the
trials. He/she is seated at a desk to the right hand side of the judge. You usually won't talk to this
person.
• The prosecutor - this is your enemy. Called the "Crown" in the law profession. The attorney acting on
behalf of the Crown will try to elicit facts from their witnesses to convict you.
• The police officer - the Crown's most important witness. Contrary to common belief, he is not your
enemy now. He is only the assistant to the Crown and to say what happened from his personal
knowledge. If he isn't careful in what he says he might even help your case. If he is not there,
congratulations, you win.
• You - the defendant. You are entitled to defend yourself after the Crown has finished presenting its case.
• Your counsellor - your lawyer or agent. He/she will be entitled to cross-examine the Crown's witnesses
and try to destroy their evidence and credibility. If you choose to defend yourself, he/she will try to


elicit facts from you in order to prove your innocence. This is called providing contradicting evidence. If
you are not represented, you play this role as well.
• Your witnesses - their testimonies should help your case somehow. You counsellor will try to elicit
facts from them to prove your case. The Crown will get the chance to cross-examine them also.
• Spectators - they are a bunch of unfortunate people, just like you. Most of them are waiting for their
cases to be heard, and some of them are friends and relatives of the accused's. You don't need to worry
about them at the trial.

6.0 The trial
When you arrive at your assigned court room, first check the list posted outside on the bulletin board. Check
to see if your name is on the list. If not, go to the information desk and ask for assistance. If your name is
on the list, then you can take a seat outside of the court room and wait for the court to open. The court will
usually open for admission 5 to 10 minutes prior to the designated time, and will be announced on the
public address system. When the court room opens, go in and take a seat at the spectator area, then wait for
the judge to show up. Look around and see if the cop is there. You should note that, when there is more
than one cop involved in your citation, all of them should be present. An example would be a cop running
the radar gun, then signalling another cop to pull over the violator. Both of them have to be there to testify.
If any one of them is absent, you can rest assure that the case will be dismissed.
When the judge comes, rise. The judge will call the case one by one, usually with the guilty pleas first.
He/she might not follow the order on the list posted outside. The guilty pleas are the quick cases, so he/she
might leave the trials till the end.
When the judge calls your name, you stand up. He/she will announce the offence you are being charged, e.g.
"You are charged with the offence of speeding 130km/h in a 100km/h zone, contrary to the Highway Traffic
Act section 128, how do you plead - guilty or not guilty?" You should then answer either "guilty", "guilty
with an explanation", or "not guilty".
If you have made this far, and have prepared your case, say "Not guilty! Your Worship." then take a seat at
the counsellor's table on the left.
First, it is the prosecution (the plaintiff) to give their testimony by direct examination (also called
examination in chief) of their witness(es) (usually the police officer). Then, it is your turn to cross-examine
their witnesses. This is the most important step since it is your opportunity to embarrass the prosecution and
make the cop look stupid.
After you have cross-examined the prosecution's witnesses, then it is now time to give your testimony. This
part is optional. Unless you have some witness who is vital to your defense, it is usually recommended to
just skip this part. If you have scored enough points in cross-examining the cop, don't waste your time to
give your own defense. Remember, if you give your own defense, the prosecution will have the opportunity
to cross-examine you. If you (and your witnesses) are not experienced, you might get screwed up there.
After the defendant's testimony, both parties will give their closing arguments. You should make a summary
of points you raised, and WHY you should be innocent. The summary should be brief and concise, and you
should not introduce new arguments here. It usually starts with "Your Worship, I sincerely ask that a verdict
of not guilty be entered based on the grounds that..." then you state your reason(s).
Then it is the verdict (judge's decision). Good luck.
A note on technicalities:
The Province of Ontario has a rule that some minor errors on the ticket will not
void it. If your name on the ticket is spelled incorrectly, this is NOT a fatal error. As long as the right
person is standing in front of the court, and the police officer can identify you, the name on the ticket does
not have to match your name exactly. Other minor errors, such as license plate, the defendant's address, and
license number etc. will not affect the validity of the ticket. The error must be major enough in such a way
that it will mislead you into preparing a defense. An example would be an offense that is not known to law
(e.g. speeding 40 km/h in a 63 km/h zone.) Other fatal errors include missing police officer's signature,
missing defendant's name, identification and signature etc. The judge will decide whether the error is fatal
and if so, he will dismiss it. Otherwise you have to continue with the trial. If you firmly believe that the


ticket bears a fatal error, you might as well just ignore it in the first place. The court will quash the charge as
if nothing was issued. However you might want to consult a lawyer before you ignore it if you are not
absolutely sure. DON'T ASSUME A SMALL ERROR WILL VOID THE TICKET AND COME
UNPREPARED.




 楼主| 发表于 2013-9-3 10:35:35 | 显示全部楼层
7.0 Appeal
It is unfortunate if you have to consider an appeal. There are three kinds of appeal: acquittal, conviction, and
sentencing. Acquittal appeal belongs to the Crown, where they feel a wrongful dismissal had occured. The
latter two kinds of appeal belong to you. You can appeal the conviction, or the sentencing, or both. If you
believe that you were wrongfully convicted, consider such an appeal to overturn the guilty conviction. If you
do not wish to dispute the conviction, but feel that the fine (sentencing) is too harsh, consider a sentencing
appeal. Sentencing appeal is usually not worth the time, money and energy involved, since we are talking
about normal speeding tickets here. The typical fine does not exceed $300, so it is really no point to file an
appeal trying to reduce the fine by a small amount.
Conviction appeal is what you should really consider, if you feel that you were treated unfairly in your first
trial. If you fall into one of the situations described below, you may want to consider filing an appeal:
• You were compelled to be a witness, even if you chose not to. This is an outright violation to the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
• You were denied to be a witness in your own defence. You have every right to defend yourself (although
you are not recommended to).
• You were denied to cross-examine the Crown's witness, or you were denied to ask certain questions
which were entirely appropriate to the case.
• The judge admitted invalid evidence, such as hearsay evidence.
• Anything that the judge erred in law that would prevent a fair trial from proceeding.
The best to do when you want an appeal is to consult a lawyer. You have 15 days to file an appeal from the
date you were convicted. If you have exceeded the time limit, order an extension. The provincial court clerk
should be able to assist you with that. You may have to pay your fines first, since you can't file an appeal
without a receipt of payment. This is done so that the court can make sure that the appellant is not trying to
evade payment of fines. You may also have to order three copies of transcript, one for yourself, one for the
prosecution, and one for the judge who will be hearing the appeal. The cost can range from $50 to a few
hundred dollars per copy. So appealing is not cheap, you should seriously consider it before you make your
move. Consider hiring a lawyer, if possible. If you still want to represent yourself, at least consult a lawyer
on how to prepare for the appeal. In an appeal hearing, it will usually be an argument of law, rather than
facts. If you are not represented by someone who practises law, it is going to be extremely hard for you.
If you have admitted the offence in your first trial, you have basically spoiled your chances of successfully
applying for an appeal (see Appendix B.6).

Appendix A. How to avoid paying another traffic tax
1. Top 10 DO's and DON'Ts of stealth driving
DO stay alert. Look as far ahead as you can, and check your mirrors. This is not only a good way to spot
speed traps early, it is also a good practice in safe driving.
DON'T exceed the speed limit by too much, when you are the only car on the road. Especially at night when
traffic is light, and cops are hard to spot. If you are caught speeding, there is no one else you can blame on.
DO find a speeding companion. When you are travelling on a highway, there will be some jerk who just
loves to show that he is the fastest on the road. It is a good opportunity to use him as a victim. Follow him
at a safe distance, if a hidden speed trap is ahead, he will be busted first. However, watching your tails will
become your responsibility.
DON'T stand out from the crowd. If you drive significantly faster than prevailing traffic and keep weaving
from left to right, you are asking for a ticket.


DO look out when you go under an overpass, go by bushes etc. Chances are cops like to hide behind those
things. Ask yourself, if I am a cop, where will I hide?
DON'T assume that cop cars are marked and have light bars on the roof. In Ontario, many cop cars don't
have lights on the roof, they are on the front grille. Some of them are unmarked, they are plain white.
DO pay special attention to the cars that come up on you from behind at night. Slow down, identify the
suspect. Memorize the headlight patterns of the common cop cars in your area.
DON'T ignore cars that are parked on the shoulder. Reportedly heavily used in Quebec, Canada, there will be
a cop running a radar gun on the shoulder of the road, then signal another cop ahead to pull over violators.
Don't assume it is just an unfortunate motorist whose car suffered a break down. It might have a cop inside
holding a radar gun.
DO watch out for sudden changes in speed limits, when you are travelling out-of-state/province. Slam on the
brakes if you need to. When the area is not familiar to you, you don't know where the speed traps are. If you
are caught speeding out-of-state/province, it is very hard to fight it unless you visit that place on a regular
basis. Remember, cops love to pull over motorists with out-of-state/province plates, as they know you are
very unlikely to contest it.
DON'T get a "cop magnet" car next time you buy a car. Mustangs, Corvettes, 300ZX's are a few examples.
Colour is also important. A "ticket-me-yellow" BMW M3 or an "arrest-me-red" Honda Prelude is surely
going to attract a lot of tickets. Get a dull, yet fast 4 door sedan such as Nissan Maxima, Taurus SHO,
Volvo T5 or anything with a powerful motor will keep your driving pleasure and avoid tickets.
2. Learn what cops use
As mentioned in the previous section, cop cars are not always marked and always have light bars on the roof.
I have seen a plain white Ford Crown Vic with flashing lights on the front grille, and also a dark blue Chevy
Blazer SUV doing a chase down the street, also with flashing lights on the grille. So don't make a false
assumption that cop cars must bear the word "POLICE" on them.
From my own experience, the OPP (Ontario Provincial Police) uses late model American made large sedans
for highway patrol (with one exception), here are the most common ones:
1. Ford Crown Victoria
2. Chevrolet Caprice
3. Ford Taurus (previous model, not the "oval" Taurus)
4. Chevrolet Lumina
5. Chevrolet Camaro Z28
Yes, there are Camaros in the OPP fleet, but reportedly there are no more than probably 8 of them, and they
are stationed near the Metropolitan Toronto area to do high speed chases on the 401, the Gardiner and Don
Valley Parkways. These are hot spots for the illegal mid-night street race events, especially on the Don
Valley Parkway because of the nice curves, so the police responded with Camaro Z28 chase vehicles. These
are marked with light bars on the roof. If you have to worry about the Camaros you probably shouldn't be
driving on public roads, but others you have to pay attention to in order to not get busted.
Readers from Ontario have reported Volvo S70 T5s as patrol cars. Personally I haven't seen one of these and
can't confirm their existance. This maybe a new toy for their rich local police force. A new Volvo T5 sedan
starts at what price? CDN$44k? The speeding ticket you couldn't be bothered to fight last time definitely
helped contributing them.
How to identify unmarked cop cars? This is a subject I would like to learn more, too. I have compiled a list
of possible "features" that an unmarked cop car is likely to have:
• flashing lights on the front grille or dash;
• suspicious lights on the back window;
• extra antennas (for their radio);
• big fat tires;
• anti-roll bars if viewed from the rear;
• alloy wheels, or missing hub caps (to avoid third-party damage in case they fly off during a high-speed
chase);
• the front and rear seats seem to be separated by glass windows;
• suspiciously clean in the winter.
If you see a vehicle with a few of those "features", slow down. Check out the occupants of the suspicious
vehicle. If you can find a child car seat, or if there is an old lady in the passenger seat, you are pretty safe. If
a young to middle aged person in some kind of uniform is driving the vehicle, don't put your money on the
line, slow down or let him pass you. I have no clue to what model of cars might be used as unmarked cop
cars, but I can be certain that cops don't use import and underpowered FWD vehicles. Don't expect that the
Geo Metro following you will turn out to be a cop car. Unless you also drive a Geo, you can easily outrun
him. Also, some really old and rusted out cars will not be unmarked cop cars. I think police equipment is
pretty up-to-date. In any suspicious situation, slow down. Remember, I have seen cops use SUVs as
unmarked cop cars, so don't rule them out.


 楼主| 发表于 2013-9-3 10:36:23 | 显示全部楼层
3. Get a good radar detector
First of all I'll have to say that I have no working experience in using radar detectors, except maybe in
computer driving games :-). I think a good radar detector will give you warning when a radar speed trap is
ahead, so that you can slow down. However this doesn't work if the cop sets his radar gun on top of a hill,
or around a corner. In these cases, when the radar detector goes off wildly, it's also time to pull over. A radar
detector is most useful when used on multi-lane, divided, limited access highways. It is less effective in city
streets, since there are too many interferences in the surroundings. The best place to mount a radar detector is
on the dash, or under the sun visor. It is useless if you stuff it in an empty radio slot. You must give the
detector a clear "view" of the road ahead (and behind if your detector has such capabilities) so that it can give
you warning in advance. Clipping the detector on the sun visor is probably better than mounting it on the
dash, but you have to arrange the power cord a bit if you don't want it hanging down. Most people prefer
clipping the cord to the headliner and routing it around the pillars then to the power socket. Some people
just use battery operated detectors to avoid the power cord altogether, sacrificing some operational
capabilities.
The province of Ontario bans the use of "radar warning devices", namely, radar detectors. Some provinces in
Canada, and most states in the U.S., allow the use of radar detectors. A good radar detector is always a good
investment. If it can save you from just a few tickets for the life of the unit, it is well worth the money.
Is it worth to get a radar detector in Ontario? First you should know what are the penalties if you are caught
having/using one. The fine can range from $50 to $200, and the unit is confiscated. Both the sale and usage
of such devices are prohibited. You may possess one, provided that it is sealed in a package, such as in an
envelope or a box. Now there are tricks you can use to operate a radar detector without getting busted. You
may prepare a padded envelope, addressed to a friend living in the U.S., stamped, and always have it in your
car whenever you operate the detector. In any case when you are pulled over, quickly unplug the detector and
put it in the envelope and seal it. You'll have to do this very quickly or you will be busted. Or
more simply, you can just hide it under your clothes. The police cannot search your body without reasonable
grounds. You know, suspecting a radar detector on a person is not reasonable grounds for a body search.
It is best if you can get your front passenger to hold the detector for you. In cases when you are encountering
road blocks, you can't possibly remove the radar detector just by yourself while you are doing the driving at
the same time. You won't have time to do it when approaching a road block. However a passenger can do
this for you very handily. Don't try to run away or make a U-turn if you encounter road blocks, this will
really tick off the cops thinking that you are a criminal. Cops don't really look for radar detectors during road
block stops, but if they see you have one, the penalty still applies. If it is at night and you are driving alone,
at least cover up the LEDs. The cops may not notice it. Stay calm. When you operate radar detectors in
Ontario, you are risking to lose it and are expected to face a stiff fine.
The Ontario Provincial Police has been known to use radar detector-detectors (VG2). These are devices
designed to sniff out the signals leaked out from radar detectors, and give the police warning that a radar
detector is in use in close proximity. The cop will cruise along in a marked/unmarked patrol car, and have
the radar detector-detector turned on. When cars with radar detectors pass by, it will give the strongest signal
when it is closest to the patrol car. Then the cop will flip on the siren and you-know-what. You see, police
forces are wasted in such a way. Instead of catching the real trouble makers, like the tailgaters and left lane
rolling road blocks, the cops are out to catch radar detector users who are otherwise safe drivers. It all boils
down to money. If left lane hogging were that easy to convict and fines are as stiff, I bet we will see more
tickets given to those left lane hoggers.
There are some devices which can sniff out signals emitted from police radar detector-detectors (radar
detector-detector-detector?). However I think these are a waste of money unless this capability is built-in to
your radar detectors. Most good radar detectors are "stealth", meaning that they are radar detector-detector-
proof. However they don't give warnings when radar detector-detectors are present. Always invest in a good
radar detector, especially if you need to operate it illegally.
4. What do you do if a cop is behind your tail?
So you can see the red and blue flashing lights in your rear view mirror, and you can hear the siren. He has
nailed you. The best to do is to slow down, and pull over to the right as soon as possible. Make your
intention very clear, that you are not trying to run away. If you are in urban area, cops are usually happy if
you pull into some side streets first to avoid the heavy traffic. The key is to make sure the cop knows that
you are not trying to escape. If you are driving a super sports car, don't even think of running away. Cop cars
are mostly modified, and they have radio. Even if you can outrun one cop, chances are a bunch of cops will
be waiting for you down in the next block.
What do you do if you are pulled over? Should you explain to the cop that you are on some kind of
emergency that you have to rush? Or should you beg the cop for mercy? There are a few guidelines you can
follow:
• Have your occupants (if any) keep absolutely silent. Don't blame, don't admit, don't make any noise.
• When the cop comes to your window, remain seated, roll down the window and have both hands on the
steering wheel. Remove your sun glasses if you have them on.
• When he asks for your driver's license and proof of registration, tell him where you put them and then
reach for them. If they are in the glove box, tell him so. If you don't tell him and just reach for the
glove box, he might think that you are trying to reach for a gun, since he has no idea of who you are -
an innocent citizen or a criminal. In every traffic stop he is putting his life on the line. Don't intensify
the atomsphere. Make his job easier and you will be let go faster.
• If he says you were speeding and asks if you would like to see the radar reading, say yes sir and proceed
to see the reading. You might want to have a glance at what the radar unit looks like. However, the cop
is not required to let you see the reading, the reason being that if you are pulled over along a busy street,
the cop doesn't want to bear the liability if you get hit by traffic.
• If he wants to write you a ticket, don't argue, don't explain, don't admit, say nothing. Don't hope for
just a warning. People have all kinds of excuses and the cop has heard them all. You may have an
imaginative excuse but it is only as good as anecdote to tell your friends. You are here to get rid of the
ticket, remember? You want to be as forgetable as possible, because if the cop doesn't remember you, he
is not likely to show up in court when you fight the ticket. You should not over use this strategy by
trying to make friends with the cop. Remain polite and business-like. Of course, you don't tell him if
you are going to fight the ticket!
• When he hands you the ticket, sign it. By signing it you are not pleading anything, just to acknowledge
that an offence notice has been served to you.
I can't say it enough times that you must not admit the offence to the cop. If you do this you are
incriminating yourself. You have every right to remain silent, and anything you say will be used against you
in court. Geez, does that sound familiar? Incriminating yourself means admitting to the cop that you were
speeding, or you were travelling at some speed over the posted limit. You should be very careful, since a lot
of immoral cops love to ask you questions like "Did you know what speed you were travelling?" or "Did
you know you were speeding?" In every case you should answer "Officer, I wasn't sure what speed I was
travelling." If you answer something like "I was doing 120km/h passing that truck" then the cop will laugh
all the way to the bank. Don't let him. You should also be aware that scumbag cops love to inflate the speed
he's going to cite you, and then getting you to admit to a lower but still illegal speed. Example: "Did you
know that you were doing 140km/h back there, and I had to really speed up to catch you?" If you say
"Officer, I was going probably no faster than 120km/h." then the cop has just nailed you. Since he's going to
write you for 20km/h over anyway you might even thank him for giving you a break. Don't fall into that
trap. Just answer "Officer, I believe you were mistaken and I am sure I wasn't going that fast" is good
enough.



 楼主| 发表于 2013-9-3 10:37:04 | 显示全部楼层

Appendix B. How to prepare for the trial

本帖最后由 MySense 于 2013-9-3 11:07 编辑

1. Plan for the worst scenario
You have read many stories from other people that how they went into court and found that the cop didn't
show up and they won the cases. Don't go into court expecting that the cop will be absent. Cops' absence
from trials usually get blown out of proportion, and everyone has an impression that cops often don't show
up for courts. This is not true, and you should always prepare your case seriously expecting the cop to be
there at the trial. In many cases, defendants don't do enough preparation because they are expecting that the
cop won't show up, and they lose badly.

2. Understand what you are being charged with
So you are being charged with "speeding", right? Wrong, or at least this is woefully incomplete. If you do not fully understand what you are being charged with, you will miss a lot of opportunities where you can spot a technicality and take advantage of it. The prosecution is charging you an offence that is contrary to the "Highway Traffic Act", under the process of the "Provincial Offences Act". These two law books are the absolute minimum
you should look up in your local library to find out exactly what the charge means. (If you live in the United States or other provinces in Canada, the law books are called "Motor Vehicle Code" or something similar.)
Now get out your ticket, and look at what section under the HTA you are being charged with. Look up that section in the HTA and see if the actions you allegedly committed violated the statute. (Make sure you have an up-to-date version of the HTA.) And even this is not good enough. Now bookmark that section, and look up the "Definitions" part of the HTA. If there are words or phrases used in the section that have definitions, read the definition carefully and see if it fits your situation/description/action. If it doesn't, you didn't violate that law and your charge should be dismissed. For example, if the law defines that a speed limit sign must
be erected no higher and lower than a certain height, and must be no more than a certain distance from the edge of the road, but the signs at the place where you were cited didn't meet this requirement, then you weren't speeding. Now you realize that you haven't done enough research, don't you?
To save you a little bit of time, let's take a look at what criterion must be met in order to convict you of speeding:
There are enough evidence to prove that...
• you were driving a motor vehicle on or about the time, date and place when the offence occured.
• you were travelling on a provincial/city highway/street.
• you were exceeding the posted speed limit.

All of the criterion above have to be met in order to convict you of speeding. The important keywords have been highlighted in bold. First, you had to be driving a motor vehicle. You cannot be convicted of speeding if you were riding a bicycle or a skateboard, because none of which legally qualifies as a motor vehicle. (Look up the definition of "motor vehicle" to see if the vehicle you were driving qualifies as a motor vehicle.) Second, you had to be travelling on a highway/street under the jurisdiction of the province or municipality. If you were on private property, you cannot be convicted of speeding. (Again, look up the definition of "highway" to see if you were really on a highway when you were pulled over.) Then, the most obvious one is that you must be exceeding the posted speed limit in order to be found guilty of speeding. Just saying "speeding 75km/h" isn't good enough. It has to be "speeding 75km/h in a 50km/h zone" or something similar. Finally, the police officer has to identify the defendant who was the one commiting the offence. (Look up the definition of "driver", and make sure that the officer didn't hand the ticket to your passenger. "Driver" is the one having care and control of the vehicle at the time of the alleged offence.) Every word and phrase has to fit your situation exactly, otherwise you may get off with a technicality.

When you have verified the above information, you can now prepare an essential elements' list, which you can check off when the cop testifies at the trial. Every bit of information in the list, the cop has to offer
evidence on. Otherwise the Crown is said to have failed to establish a prima facie case.

(A case where all the criterion are met is called a "prima facie" case. If the Crown has failed to establish a prima facie case, the case has to be dismissed).

During the cop's testimony, check off the items that he has raised, and take note of the answers. Be very careful of anything that he has missed. When you cross-examine their witness(es), make sure you don't touch on those things, otherwise you will be doing the job for them. For example, if the cop forgot to testify the speed limit on that road, you don't ask any questions about speed limits. If the Crown has only one witness, which is usually the police officer, then it is best to just call "no questions" for cross-examination. The closure of the Crown's case will then follow, and you immediately raise a motion to the judge that since the Crown has failed to establish a prima facie case, you sincerely ask the court that the case be dismissed. If the Crown has more than one witness, then you will have to cross-examine them anyway, assuming each one of them will subsequently fill up the check list. But the general rule still applies, that you don't ask any questions about the things which the witness didn't touch on. After all the Crown's witnesses have testified, you can move for a dismissal if anything on the check list is unchecked.

Here is an example of the check list:
• Has the prosecution identified the operator of the vehicle who commited the offence? (Y/N)
• Has the prosecution identified that the vehicle was a "motor" vehicle? (Y/N)
• Has the prosecution identified that the vehicle was the one cited, with the license plate, model and colour the same as the one on the ticket? (Y/N)
• What province/territory was the plate registered in?
• Has the prosecution testified that the defendant was travelling on a provincial/municipal highway/street? (Y/N)
• What was the speed limit on that highway/street?
• How fast was the defendant travelling?

Check off the items (don't cross them out) and see if anything is unchecked. Bring them out to the judge at
the closure of the Crown's case, and move for a dismissal. When the Crown's case is closed, the court
usually does not allow it to be re-opened again. However, if you don't move for a dismissal, but later
testified yourself and filled in the missing holes for them, a conviction which follows will stand, and
appeals to overturn the conviction will most likely fail.
Unless the cop and the prosecution attorney are dumb, they can usually establish a prima facie case.
However, proving all the evidence raised in each element beyond a reasonable doubt goes a lot further than
that. Your next step is to try to lower their credibility by attacking the evidence. This mainly takes place by means of cross-examining the police officer, which will be discussed in section 4. Before we talk about cross-examination, we first look at examination-in-chief, which is also called direct examination.

3. Examination-in-chief
Here, the prosecution attorney will ask their own witness(es) questions, in order to elicit the facts to prove their point. When the prosecution attorney is asking questions, pay close attention and make objections if improper questions are raised. Object immediately, don't wait until the witness answers or when the next question is asked. Stand up and call out "Objection, Your Worship!" and then state your reason(s). Usually objections are made when the prosecution has violated one or more of the rules of evidence, which will be discussed later. The judge will decide whether to sustain (grant your objection) or overrule it (deny).

There is nothing really you can prepare for examination-in-chief, except to prepare making objections immediately. Don't be afraid to make objections, even if it does not seem to have a strong reason. You might have overlooked something that the judge has noticed, and if you don't object, it will automatically be considered accepted by you. Study the rules of evidence carefully, and compile a list of possible objections in front of you so that you can quickly refer to them during examination-in-chief. That's why you have to come to court as a spectator to see how witnesses give testimonies and the possible violations they might make.

There are limitations of what kinds of questions the prosecution can ask their witnesses. They can only ask non-leading questions, nothing else. Here is an example of a non-leading question:
Q: What speed was the defendant travelling?
An example of a leading question:
Q: The defendant was exceeding the speed limit, right?
Stand up and call out "Objection, Your Worship. The counsellor is leading the witness."
If you rent the Legal Defense Kit from NMA, there might be suggestions that you object to the officer reading from his notes. This is of no use in Ontario, since the officer will be allowed to read from his notes, and he will swear that his notes are of his own hand-writing. Don't bother objecting to this. The judge will not sustain it.
After the prosecution attorney has finished asking the cop questions, you will be given the opportunity to cross-examine him. If the Crown has more than one witness, then the next witness will only be called to take the stand after you have cross-examined the first one. Then this procedure repeats until all the Crown's witnesses have testified and have been cross-examined.


 楼主| 发表于 2013-9-3 10:38:17 | 显示全部楼层
本帖最后由 MySense 于 2013-9-5 09:46 编辑

4. Cross-examination
This is where the fun comes in. The cop will still be on the stand, waiting to be whipped by you. Just a reminder, that you are acting the role of a counsellor. You don't think yourself as the defendant in this part.
There are some techniques to asking cross-examination questions. Unlike examination-in-chief, cross-examination is pretty freestyle. You can ask leading questions, suggest a scenario and ask him if it is possible, or even tell him the correct answer if he spoils it. The ideal cross-examination question is a yes/no question. Make it as little chance as possible for the cop to bring in more evidence favourable to the Crown.
If he answers more, stop him and tell him to only answer yes or no. Construct the questions in a way that an answer is obvious. The obvious answer should help your case and create in the judge's mind doubt of the Crown's evidence. If the cop answers otherwise it will make him look stupid or you will have some doucments to nail him on the wrong answer. The bottom line is, you should know the answer to every question before you ask the cop.
Conducting a good cross-examination is vital to your defense. The approach is two fold: 1) destroy the credibility of the Crown's witness(es); 2) introduce contradicting evidence. These approaches are not mutually exclusive. You should strive to achieve both. In fact, the second approach is necessary if you want to leave the court room with a not guilty verdict. There are so many ways to introduce contradicting evidence in cross-examination, which will be discussed later in greater detail. We will first look at destroying the credibility of the Crown's witness. Normally, the police officer will be the Crown's most important witness.
His credibility is always higher than yours, since he has no reason to lie. But you are here to fight your ticket, so if you offer contradicting evidence yourself you won't be believed. There are two prime examples where you can destroy the cop's credibility: the cop writes traffic tickets to fulfill some quota system, and/or, he was in an unmarked patrol car. If you can get the cop to admit that ticket quotas do exist in his police agency, then his credibility will be reduced since he has some immoral motivation to write traffic tickets (e.g. to gain promotion etc.). This can be very hard to achieve since most cops will not admit it, and most
prosecution attorneys will object to your questions on the grounds that these questions are irrelevant. If you were pulled over by a cop in an unmarked patrol car, perhaps you should try asking these questions:
1. Officer, what is the model of the patrol car in the citation? Was it marked, or unmarked?
You should know the answer.
2. Do you believe that abiding by the speed limits will increase safety?
He has no reason to say no.
3. Do you believe that exceeding the speed limits is dangerous?
If he didn't test the radar unit on that day, he is ignoring his training and all readings obtained should be thrown out.

4. Do you have calibration certificate for the tuning forks?
Tuning forks are used to test the accuracy of radar units. A tuning fork is a piece of metal which looks like a fork (hence the name), and will generate a specified frequency wave when striken. Usually it has to be striken by a non-metallic object, such as the bottom of a shoe/boot. After the tuning fork has been striken, the cop will hold the fork in front of the radar antenna and see the reading. If the radar reading agrees with the fork's specs, the radar unit is said to be working properly. If not, the radar unit needs repair. Usually there are two tuning forks of different frequencies which will show as different speeds on the radar unit. Both have to be correct.

If the tuning forks don't have calibration certificates from the testing laboratories, their accuracies are doubtful. A tuning fork is an extremely delicate tool where slight discrepancies or scratches can result in huge differences in readings. Note that tuning forks do not appear anywhere in the list of things the Crown needs to prove to establish prima facie evidence. However if the tuning forks are not accurate or are not in proper working order there ought to be a reasonable doubt on the accuracy of the radar unit. Move to strike radar as evidence against you if something is not right.

Again, we will assume the judge is a jerk and doesn't buy any of your motions. Read on.

They usually have a "model testimony" to give during their show, and would cover everything that is needed to convict you. Most cops will say they saw this car coming, in his trained eyes it appeared to him speeding, and the radar reading confirmed it. THIS IS WRONG! They can never judge a car's speed using plain eyes farther than a radar can determine. The law requires that the officer has to form his own INDEPENDENT visual opinion that the car was speeding, and be supported by radar. This can never happen.
A radar, even the cheapest one, has a much longer effective range in determining target speed than the most capable plain human eyes. If a cop says he saw this car coming and it appeared to be speeding, then he checks his radar to confirm it, he is lying. The radar would have clocked the target speed long ago before he could even see it. The following line of questions will reveal this fact:
1. Officer, how far ahead can you see using plain eyes, given the weather condition on [insert date of offence]?
Take note of his answer. The intelligent officer will say he doesn't know, or it depends. Throw a number such as 200m at him and see if he agrees. If he still refuses to accept a figure, move on.
2. Do you know the approximate range of your radar unit?
If he is a competent radar operator, he should know the answer. If he doesn't know, make a motion to the judge that the officer is not a competent witness. Also move to strike radar as evidence. A typical radar unit has a range of approximately 400m (1200 feet).
3. Do you think that you can see farther than the range of the radar unit?
The obvious answer is no.
4. Isn't it true that you cannot see a car coming until the radar has already picked it up?
It is true, unless he sets up the radar around a curve or on a hill.
5. That means the radar has already told you a car is speeding even before you can see it?
Yes.
6. Would the radar reading somehow influence your decision about a car is speeding?
The honest officer will answer yes.
7. Can you form an INDEPENDENT [with emphasis] opinion about a car is speeding when the radar has told you it's already got one?
Obviously he can't.

You are in very good shape if you were not the only moving car on the road when the citation occured. The classical approach is to blame it on somebody else. Ask the following questions:
1. Can your radar unit distinguish between different directions of traffic?
Almost all traffic radar can't. They can register speed both coming towards or going away from the radar unit.
2. How wide is the radar beam at a distance of 100m, 200m, 300m...?
Note his answers. If he says he doesn't know, tell him to answer in number of lanes. A typical radar can cover all four lanes of traffic at 200m.
3. Can your radar unit distinguish between targets? In other words, does it tell you which car is responsible for a reading?
No! The ones which can cost millions of dollars.
4. Since your radar unit cannot distinguish target direction, nor identify targets, that means any moving car on all 4 lanes of traffic in range can produce a reading?
Yes, certainly.
5. How do you know the alleged radar reading [insert offence speed] wasn't produced by that truck in the right lane?
He doesn't know. Hence reasonable doubt exists.
If you have made this far, congratulations. In the cop's testimony, he might have stated that you were passing other cars and thus were fastest. But don't worry, as long as there were other cars in the opposite direction, the classical approach still works.
6. Officer, you testified that I was the fastest among traffic. Is it possible that the radar reading was produced by opposite traffic, while I was only passing vehicles who were travelling below the speed limit?
See? Going faster than other vehicles isn't against the law. The cop can't possibly compare speeds in opposite directions, therefore reasonable doubt still exists.
 楼主| 发表于 2013-9-5 09:47:05 | 显示全部楼层

If you weren't so fortunate, that you were the only car on the road, things are a little more difficult for you. You may have very little chance of winning, but you've got to try anyway. (assuming you already know the range of the radar unit, and the approximate range that the cop can see ahead.)
1. Do you agree that the radar unit has a longer range than your eyes?
Yes.
2. Is it possible that the radar is clocking some moving vehicle that is beyond your visual range?
Yes.
3. then is it possible that more than one car were in range of the radar, but the defendant's car was the only one visible to you?
Yes, it is possible, but the clever officer will answer unlikely.
If things are not looking too good for you at this stage, it isn't the end of the trial yet. Hopefully you have the radar manual in your hands, and you should make good use of it. You should have studied it well in advance. If you don't have time, at least find out what are the pitfalls and shortcomings of the radar unit.
They should be documented in the manual. For example, some radar units will produce unreliable readings if the ambient temperature falls below or rise above a certain range. If the offence date happened to be a cold or hot day which will likely affect the reliability of the radar unit, then you make sure that you ask the cop how hot or how cold that day was, and show him at that temperature, the radar wouldn't give reliable readings.
The opportunities of attacking the Crown's evidence are plentiful. The above questions are only some good starting points. I hope you find them useful, and I always welcome suggestions (email: fyst@magma.ca).
5. Why you are not recommended to defend yourself
When you take the stand and are sworn in, you are expected to testify truthfully to the best of your knowledge. The reason why you should not defend yourself is simple: you don't want to shoot yourself (see later) or lie under oath. Unless you really didn't speed, and you strongly believe that the cop caught the wrong person, you should not testify and defend for yourself.
If you defend, you either will have to say you really did speed (shoot yourself), of you really did not speed (lie). If you lie and say that you were really only going 40 km/h on that road, unless you have special recollection of other facts to support that claim, nobody will believe you, and the prosecutor will have its own way to reveal that you either lied or weren't really sure that you were only going 40km/h. The police officer's credibility is always higher than yours. Remember, the judge has full power to choose whom to believe, you or the cop. If the cop says you were speeding, and you say you were not, both testified under oath, then it would be his words against yours. The judge will always, always choose to believe the cop.
Unless you scored big time during cross-examination, the credibility of the cop will be always higher than yours. If you have already scored big time, why destroy all the hard work? Furthermore, the judge's choice of not believing in your testimony is NOT valid grounds for an appeal.
Lying under oath is a felony - which will cost much much more than the face value of the ticket itself. You are here to get rid of the ticket, not to get into bigger trouble. You really lose nothing more if you can't win, but you will lose more than just money (freedom?) if you lied.
You are under absolutely no obligations whatsoever to defend. If you have scored enough points, raised reasonable doubt in cross-examination, that's good enough. If you don't win, don't ruin your chances of taking the case to a higher court for appeal. If you defend, you will either have to admit (ruin your chances) or lie.
6. Don't shoot yourself
When you choose "not guilty" on the ticket, and pleaded so to the judge, you should understand the true meaning behind it.
Excuses like the following will certainly fail:
"I didn't know the speed limit to this road"
"I didn't pay attention"
"My wife was about to give birth and we were rushing to the hospital"
"My speedometer broke"
"I was just following the flow of traffic"
"The tail wind was too strong"
"The throttle stuck"
"I was only going xx km/h over not yy km/h over"
If you are planning to give any of these to the judge, you should have chosen option 2 (guilty with explanation) on your ticket. Ignorance of the law doesn't make you innocent. If you admit that you actually broke a law, even with a very good explanation, you should have chosen "guilty with explanation" instead of "not guilty". Speeding is an "absolute liability" offence which means there is no defence unless the prosecution couldn't prove it. Your job is to disprove the prosecution's evidence. Any explanation or any
other defence is useless.
Remember, even if you really did it and pleaded "not guilty", you are not lying. You don't have to admit it, since it is up to the prosecution to prove you guilty. You don't have to lie anything and I don't encourage anyone to do so. Concentrate on attacking the prosecution's evidence, instead of showing to the judge how innocent you are. If the prosecution fails to prove you guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, you are innocent.
7. Some basic rules of evidence in court
Here is a list of common violations witnesses and/or prosecutors might make when testifying/questioning:
Hearsay:
Witnesses cannot testify something that is beyond their personal experience or knowledge. They cannot testify something that is said by another person, or else that person has to come and testify what he said. For example, if the cop says "the computer operator told me the defendant's driver's license was under suspension", then you immediately stand up and call "Objection! Hearsay!". The computer operator has to come and testify, or the cop must produce certified printout to support his claim, otherwise the evidence
cannot be admitted.
Lack of foundation:
The cop cannot testify something that has no basis on. He cannot comment on the accuracy of the speedometer of his cop car, without a calibration certificate, for example.
Speculation:
This is equivalent to a wild guess. The prosecutor might make a statement saying "the defendant knew that he was speeding anyway." Then you should immediately object because the prosecutor cannot be sure what you know.
Irrelevant:
If the cop says something that is irrelevant to the charge, or he mentions some other offences that weren't written down, object. For example, if you were charged speeding, then the cop says in court that you were not wearing a seatbelt at that time, it is irrelevant unless he also charged you with a seatbelt violation.
Immaterial:
Similar to irrelevant, but the evidence is somehow related to the charge, only that it is too remote to be of any use. For example, your past driving record.
Non-expert witness:
If the cop says something that is beyond his professional skills and training, object to his testimony. e.g., if he says "the defendant was crazy when I pulled him over", then you should object because he is not a psychologist. "His car's wheels were out of alignment", object because he is not a mechanic.
8. Defence of necessity
In rare circumstances, you may want to consider this approach. Please keep in mind, that defence of necessity is not acceptable in many courts. Ontario is one exception. It is entirely possible to use this strategy to defend yourself if you think you fall into the following situation: you must speed to avoid a nasty accident or collision, which would be very likely to endanger yourself and others.
The concept of defence of necessity is to plead not guilty to the charge, but do not dispute the charge. You will state your side of the story why speed was the only possible solution to avoid being involved in a bad accident. I have personally witnessed such a case in court, where the defendant was charged 90 km/h in a 60 km/h zone. He was travelling on the right lane, which was going to merge into the left lane, and obstruction was ahead so merging late was not a possibility. There was a bus (much greater in size and weight) behind him gaining on him, so braking was not possible either. There were traffic in the left lane beside him, so the only possible way was to speed up, overtake the left lane traffic, find an open space and merge in. The judge decided that the defendant was not guilty.
Using defence of necessity is best left to be handled by a lawyer.
9. Relax
This is an unfair battle. You are not expected to win, especially if this is the first time you are to defend yourself in a court of law. There is nothing more to lose if you are convicted. Just pat yourself at the back for a job well done, pay the cashier on your way out, put everything behind you and get on with your life.
You have made the system work for your money, and this is good enough. Think of it as a bonus if you do win. In most cases, even if you lose, you can get the fine reduced by a considerable amount just by sitting in the courtroom for a while. Routinely courts will reduce your fine and/or grant an extension of up to 90 days to pay. Then you already come out ahead.



 楼主| 发表于 2013-9-5 09:48:18 | 显示全部楼层
Appendix C. How radar works
This is not intended to teach you any technical aspects of radar. You don't need to know how to assemble a radar unit to fight it. You only need to know the basic principles of radar so that you know how to deal with it both in court and on the road.
You can think of a radar unit as a flash light. Instead of emitting visible light, radar emits invisible electromagnetic waves at a certain frequency. When you shine a light beam from a flash light over an object, the light is reflected back to your eyes so that you can see the object. The same principle applies to radar beams. The electromagnetic wave that radar emits is called microwave, which will reflect off most metallic objects, concrete, trees, wood etc. It will however go through grass, bushes etc, just like light will go though glass and transparent objects.
The radar unit uses an antenna to "read" the microwave that is reflected back from an object (such as a car), just like you use your eyes to capture the reflected light from your flash light. If the microwave from the radar hits a moving target, the waves' frequency will change based on the "doppler shift" principle. With the reflected wave's changed frequency, and the known frequency that the radar emits, the computer inside the radar unit will be able to calculate the target speed. Note that radar cannot determine the target speed when the target is travelling perpendicular to the radar beam, since there will be no doppler shift relative to the radar antenna.
It's that simple. However, you might be already aware, that there are so many shortcomings to traffic radar.
First of all, radar is prone to interference. It is not too hard to figure out that the radar's antenna will accept any microwave that it is able to "hear". In other words, the antenna might not be "hearing" the waves which originated from its own unit. High voltage power lines, telephone lines, power stations, even neon lights, do emit lots of electrmagnetic waves. There is absolutely no way to tell which wave the antenna is hearing.
Secondly, radar cannot determine which target reflected off the waves. If there are two cars both travelling in a close proximity, no one can tell who is responsible for the radar reading if such is obtained. Identifying the target is a job left to the radar operator, who frequently makes mistakes. At a distance of 200m, the width of the radar beam can usually cover all 4 lanes of traffic travelling in both direction. In other words, it is impossible for the cop to know exactly which vehicle is responsible for the radar reading he obtained, even if there is only one vehicle on the road he can see. The reason is radar has a typical range of approximately 400m (1200 feet), which is beyond the visual range of most human eyes. The radar might be clocking a speeder at a distance of 300m, but the cop can only see an innocent driver coming towards him at a distance of 100m. As a result, an unjust ticket will be issued. Not to mention if there are more than two cars in the visual range of the cop.
Furthermore, radar does not necessarily pick up the fastest moving object. The strongest return signal can be affected by a number of different factors, such as the target's size, the cross-sectional area facing the radar antenna, its relative speed and the distance from the radar unit. For example, if a Corvette is travelling at 80km/h 50m from the radar, and a truck is speeding 110km/h at 200m away, the radar may pick up the return signal from the truck and register a speed of 110km/h. The officer however might think that the
Corvette is the one responsible for the violation and therefore issues an undeserved ticket. In addition, when traffic radar is used near an international airport, the radar will pick up the return signals from airborne objects. In this case, extremely fast speeds such as 300-400km/h will be registered on the radar. Even if an aircraft is flying at a few km's away, the radar will still be capable to pick up the return signal since an aircraft is much greater in size and has much faster speed than any ground vehicle. I can't imagine if you are
being charged 300km/h in a 60km/h zone by a clueless cop.
Of course, there are radar units which can identify multiple targets, determine their speeds, range, shape, altitude, direction of travel etc., but these radar units cost millions of dollars and are properties of the military and airports. Traffic radar units have to be cheap, small, and thus error-prone.
There is a variation of traffic radar, which is called moving radar. It works pretty much the same way as the type described above (stationary radar), only that moving radar is used when the cop car is moving (for the purpose of highway patrol, for example). There are two readouts on the radar unit, one shows the target speed, one shows the cop car speed. The target speed is obtained the same way as stationary radar. The cop car speed, is however obtained by striking the radar beam to the side of the road, reflecting off stationary
objects on the roadside, such as lamp posts, trees etc., to get a speed reading. Since the target speed will only be relative to the cop car speed, therefore by adding the cop car speed to the relative target speed, one will get the absolute speed of the target. Moving radar is subject to all the errors stationary radar has, plus the error of determining the cop car speed.
There is another type of traffic radar, which is photo radar. It was used for a short time in Ontario, then slashed when the new Government took over. However, photo radar is used in many other provinces and in the States. Strictly speaking, photo radar is not a variation of traditional radar. It is basically a stationary radar with the capability of taking photos. Photo radar is never used in moving mode. A police officer often sets up the photo radar on the shoulder of a highway, pointing the radar towards oncoming traffic. For stealth reasons, the radar unit is hidden in a vehicle, usually a minivan. There will be a camera mounted on top of the vehicle, connected to the radar unit. After the photo radar unit is set up, the police officer can go to sleep, read the paper, or eat donut. The radar will monitor traffic speed continuously, if a violation speed above the threshold speed is detected, the camera will automatically take a picture of the violating vehicle's license plate. At the end of the day, all the pictures will be developed, and a ticket will be mailed to the respective registered owners of the vehicles.
Radar is not infallible as most people and courts believe. Although the technology has advanced a lot during the years, and the radar units have become more and more user friendly, it doesn't change the fact that radar still makes mistakes especially at the hands of a poorly trained operator. I have received emails from police officers and provincial prosecutors who read this page, telling me that today's radar units no longer need any calibration. All they need to do is to push a test button on the unit. If the unit says pass then the radar is good, if it says fail then it is bad. This is absolute nonsense. The test button on the radar unit is only a simple check of the unit's internal circuitry. Successfully completing this INTERNAL check says absolutely nothing about how accurately the radar will display speed readings from EXTERNAL inputs. Usually tuning forks are used to perform this external calibration test. Since tuning forks are extremely delicate tools, and they need regular certification, so the prosecution will want to minimize the cost of operating radar units by introducing this blatant nonsense.
Only we get our act together the Government will slash this error-prone technology to enforce traffic speed.
Much of the research and development work of radar manufacturers has been concentrated on defeating radar detectors, therefore we can be quite certain that Governments are not really interested in road safety, only money.



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