Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got a $250 "handicap ticket" for parking in a regular spot. It was a BOGUS ticket. I documented proof that my car was parked legally and took pictures of everything. I even spoke to the meter maid who gave me a ticket, trying to show her it wasn't a handicapped spot (she played dumb). I went to the courthouse, tried to fight it and I STILL LOST!!!!!
It was unreal. I learned my lesson- just shut up and pay the damn ticket. It's more like a tax for driving into DC than a ticket since most of the tickets are bogus.
I pretty much refuse to drive into DC anymore now, so DC is losing $$$ from me (since I was shopping and eating in Georgetown when the bogus ticket occurred).
You had documented proof that the car was parked legally, and you went to the courthouse and fought it, and yet you still lost?
Maybe the car wasn't parked legally?
In which case, perhaps the people in DC are not very unhappy that somebody who parks illegally no longer comes to DC?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Welcome to the scam of photo radar tickets, which serve mostly to line the pockets of the contractors who run the systems and the jurisdictions who extract hidden taxes via the high fees and one-sided rules requiring you to "pay to play" if you even want to contest a citation in a meaningful way.
There is an easy way to avoid participating in this scam. I will even tell you what it is!
Don't speed.
Well, Mr. or Ms. Sanctimonious,
If you read above or if you know anything about how this system works, you would know that your glib rejoinder is wrong and reflects your ignorance of the facts.
Photo radar can take a picture of more than one vehicle in the field of view. One car may be going 75 mph, one may be going 50 mph. The camera cannot tell which is which.
So you will be informed to know that the driver going 50 mph in a 50 mph zone can, indeed, get a photo radar citation even though they are not speeding.
I'm sure you enjoyed your goody two-shoes moment of self righteousness but it is not based in fact. Keep on dreaming that dream, snowflake.
It sure is based in fact for me. I don't speed, and I've never gotten any speeding tickets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Welcome to the scam of photo radar tickets, which serve mostly to line the pockets of the contractors who run the systems and the jurisdictions who extract hidden taxes via the high fees and one-sided rules requiring you to "pay to play" if you even want to contest a citation in a meaningful way.
There is an easy way to avoid participating in this scam. I will even tell you what it is!
Don't speed.
Well, Mr. or Ms. Sanctimonious,
If you read above or if you know anything about how this system works, you would know that your glib rejoinder is wrong and reflects your ignorance of the facts.
Photo radar can take a picture of more than one vehicle in the field of view. One car may be going 75 mph, one may be going 50 mph. The camera cannot tell which is which.
So you will be informed to know that the driver going 50 mph in a 50 mph zone can, indeed, get a photo radar citation even though they are not speeding.
I'm sure you enjoyed your goody two-shoes moment of self righteousness but it is not based in fact. Keep on dreaming that dream, snowflake.
It sure is based in fact for me. I don't speed, and I've never gotten any speeding tickets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got a $250 "handicap ticket" for parking in a regular spot. It was a BOGUS ticket. I documented proof that my car was parked legally and took pictures of everything. I even spoke to the meter maid who gave me a ticket, trying to show her it wasn't a handicapped spot (she played dumb). I went to the courthouse, tried to fight it and I STILL LOST!!!!!
It was unreal. I learned my lesson- just shut up and pay the damn ticket. It's more like a tax for driving into DC than a ticket since most of the tickets are bogus.
I pretty much refuse to drive into DC anymore now, so DC is losing $$$ from me (since I was shopping and eating in Georgetown when the bogus ticket occurred).
You had documented proof that the car was parked legally, and you went to the courthouse and fought it, and yet you still lost?
Maybe the car wasn't parked legally?
In which case, perhaps the people in DC are not very unhappy that somebody who parks illegally no longer comes to DC?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got a $250 "handicap ticket" for parking in a regular spot. It was a BOGUS ticket. I documented proof that my car was parked legally and took pictures of everything. I even spoke to the meter maid who gave me a ticket, trying to show her it wasn't a handicapped spot (she played dumb). I went to the courthouse, tried to fight it and I STILL LOST!!!!!
It was unreal. I learned my lesson- just shut up and pay the damn ticket. It's more like a tax for driving into DC than a ticket since most of the tickets are bogus.
I pretty much refuse to drive into DC anymore now, so DC is losing $$$ from me (since I was shopping and eating in Georgetown when the bogus ticket occurred).
You had documented proof that the car was parked legally, and you went to the courthouse and fought it, and yet you still lost?
Maybe the car wasn't parked legally?
In which case, perhaps the people in DC are not very unhappy that somebody who parks illegally no longer comes to DC?
Anonymous wrote:I got a $250 "handicap ticket" for parking in a regular spot. It was a BOGUS ticket. I documented proof that my car was parked legally and took pictures of everything. I even spoke to the meter maid who gave me a ticket, trying to show her it wasn't a handicapped spot (she played dumb). I went to the courthouse, tried to fight it and I STILL LOST!!!!!
It was unreal. I learned my lesson- just shut up and pay the damn ticket. It's more like a tax for driving into DC than a ticket since most of the tickets are bogus.
I pretty much refuse to drive into DC anymore now, so DC is losing $$$ from me (since I was shopping and eating in Georgetown when the bogus ticket occurred).
Anonymous wrote:Just reading this thread infuriates me.
I'm not a speeder but DC makes it HARD to go the speed limit. It's constantly changing and always too low (25mph!? Why?!?). It's all a scam to get you to pay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Welcome to the scam of photo radar tickets, which serve mostly to line the pockets of the contractors who run the systems and the jurisdictions who extract hidden taxes via the high fees and one-sided rules requiring you to "pay to play" if you even want to contest a citation in a meaningful way.
There is an easy way to avoid participating in this scam. I will even tell you what it is!
Don't speed.
Well, Mr. or Ms. Sanctimonious,
If you read above or if you know anything about how this system works, you would know that your glib rejoinder is wrong and reflects your ignorance of the facts.
Photo radar can take a picture of more than one vehicle in the field of view. One car may be going 75 mph, one may be going 50 mph. The camera cannot tell which is which.
So you will be informed to know that the driver going 50 mph in a 50 mph zone can, indeed, get a photo radar citation even though they are not speeding.
I'm sure you enjoyed your goody two-shoes moment of self righteousness but it is not based in fact. Keep on dreaming that dream, snowflake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Welcome to the scam of photo radar tickets, which serve mostly to line the pockets of the contractors who run the systems and the jurisdictions who extract hidden taxes via the high fees and one-sided rules requiring you to "pay to play" if you even want to contest a citation in a meaningful way.
There is an easy way to avoid participating in this scam. I will even tell you what it is!
Don't speed.
Anonymous wrote:Just reading this thread infuriates me.
I'm not a speeder but DC makes it HARD to go the speed limit. It's constantly changing and always too low (25mph!? Why?!?). It's all a scam to get you to pay.
Anonymous wrote:Welcome to the scam of photo radar tickets, which serve mostly to line the pockets of the contractors who run the systems and the jurisdictions who extract hidden taxes via the high fees and one-sided rules requiring you to "pay to play" if you even want to contest a citation in a meaningful way.
Anonymous wrote:Welcome to the scam of photo radar tickets, which serve mostly to line the pockets of the contractors who run the systems and the jurisdictions who extract hidden taxes via the high fees and one-sided rules requiring you to "pay to play" if you even want to contest a citation in a meaningful way.