1st speeding violation
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by gonfishin, Apr 22, 2012.
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Gizmo_Man Thanks this.
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Almost the same thing happened to me in 2010 just got my CDL again and less than a month later got a speeding ticket but on the freeway not a construction site for 15mph over the posted speed limit on my motorsickle. Could not take drivers training because of just getting CDL, didn't think much of it at the time only ticket in about 20 years so I just blew it off and paid the fine.
I know anything at 15mph or above is a red flag, most company's will want that ticket at least 3 years old it has screwed me out of a couple places I wanted to get into. I would take the time and go to court and see if you can lessen the charge in anyway seeing as it is only 12mph over might work to your advantage. I was told by one company if my ticket was for 14mph over instead of the 15 it would of been acceptable I learned my lesson when the cop seen my CDL he only wrote me up for 15 over even though he clocked me at 96mph I got lucky in a way he could of really screwed me. -
Big deal, the court dismissed it so it never went on his record.x#1 Thanks this. -
It is also relevent, IF, an inspection was performed as well.
Otherwise, he might be lucky, but not truly.
Some police depts go ahead and contact the companies direct after the ticket is issued.
http://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/rules-regulations/administration/fmcsr/fmcsrruletext.aspx?reg=384.226
Here is the rule:
§ 384.226 Prohibition on masking convictions.The State must not mask, defer imposition of judgment, or allow an individual to enter into a diversion program that would prevent a CLP or CDL holder's conviction for any violation, in any type of motor vehicle, of a State or local traffic control law (other than parking, vehicle weight, or vehicle defect violations) from appearing on the CDLIS driver record, whether the driver was convicted for an offense committed in the State where the driver is licensed or another State. -
Ticket received is NOT a conviction. It was dismissed. To hold it against the driver is violating his rights to due process. Oh wait. That no longer applies to a CDL holder I guess is what you are saying.
Reference the specific statute or regulation that makes a dismissed ticket still valid and has clout. -
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In addition, companies are becoming proactive on this and insurance companies are pushing for the tickets being reported when received.
Take it up with them.
I have not had a speeding ticket since 1974.
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