This is so small I doubt it. Just pay it and forget it.
No, that is not material to the charge.
It is not going to invalidate the ticket. The make and model is not critical to the nature of the violation.
A ticket Can be thrown out for any reason the judge deems fit. However what do you mean by the wrong name. But in general if the officer gave you a ticket then it is yours. You obviously did something wrong just own up to it. Trying to weasel out of a ticket because of some small clerical error, which he may have fixed upon returning to the station (I have seen this happen before, someone has there ticket and something is werong on it like a name or something and the court documents have that same ticket with the corrected info, they usually side with the officer) only upsets judges and magistrates because of your lack of ethics
Yes. My sister got a ticket for speeding, but the officer had written down the wrong speed limit. She wrote to the court for the ticket and had the ticket waived.
I have the same question! I was looking over the ticket I got last night and realized the officer clearly wrote a 9 as the last number in my drivers license number and the last number of my drivers license number is really a 3...I really hope this makes the ticket void.
No, that is not material to the charge.
Yes, it can!
It is not going to invalidate the ticket. The make and model is not critical to the nature of the violation.
A ticket Can be thrown out for any reason the judge deems fit. However what do you mean by the wrong name. But in general if the officer gave you a ticket then it is yours. You obviously did something wrong just own up to it. Trying to weasel out of a ticket because of some small clerical error, which he may have fixed upon returning to the station (I have seen this happen before, someone has there ticket and something is werong on it like a name or something and the court documents have that same ticket with the corrected info, they usually side with the officer) only upsets judges and magistrates because of your lack of ethics
It is very unlikely that a traffic ticket will be dismissed if the Officer does not record the birth date correctly.
Yes. My sister got a ticket for speeding, but the officer had written down the wrong speed limit. She wrote to the court for the ticket and had the ticket waived.
In Kentucky the vehicle name is not going to invalidate the ticket. The make and model is not critical to the nature of the violation.
It is more likely to be thrown out if it is not a major citation, or if you have a good driving record. You could also mention the wrong direction was written on your ticket to the judge and make him aware that the ticketing officer was confused or lacking intelligence.
It is understood that any diffrential in the facts undermine the creditibility of the officer.
If the mistake is a minor spelling error, the ticket is usually still valid. If your name is "Joe Smith" and the officer puts down "Joe Snith", such a mistake can usually simply be corrected by the court clerk or Judge. If your name is "Joe Smith" and the officer puts down "Mike Davis", then there might be grounds to dismiss the ticket (as long as you didn't give the wrong name to the officer.)
I have the same question! I was looking over the ticket I got last night and realized the officer clearly wrote a 9 as the last number in my drivers license number and the last number of my drivers license number is really a 3...I really hope this makes the ticket void.
Depends whats wrong with it and how much you want to spend. I got a ticket there once, and the officer filled out the location wrong. I responded with my route logged on my laptop. Not guilty because I was never where he said the infraction occured!