Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any more info? I appreciate it.
What more do you want?!
I was wondering if others had gone through something similar and had advice about what to expect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Happened to my husband. They let him drive home, thankfully. He had to give a pal from college $2,000 to go to court for it. It is not a typical meaningless traffic ticket, it is a bonafide CRIMINAL citation.
What happened at your husband's court date?
His lawyer friend took care of it. It was dismissed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Happened to my husband. They let him drive home, thankfully. He had to give a pal from college $2,000 to go to court for it. It is not a typical meaningless traffic ticket, it is a bonafide CRIMINAL citation.
What happened at your husband's court date?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. If you're in VA I think traffic court is basically part of criminal court. Like for example if I look myself up in the VA court system, I can see when I was pulled over for running a stop sign in college and it lists the officer who wrote my ticket as "arresting officer." I was not arrested. I went to court and paid $175.
Expired license is not traffic court, it is criminal court.
Anonymous wrote:Happened to my husband. They let him drive home, thankfully. He had to give a pal from college $2,000 to go to court for it. It is not a typical meaningless traffic ticket, it is a bonafide CRIMINAL citation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, this is pure speculation on my end but if the peace officer told you that, then he likely was making a sarcastic joke.
Which I would not think is very funny personally. 🫤
But to answer your question - no you won’t be going to jail for performing an illegal U-turn on an expired driver’s license.
Your “pure speculation” is devoid of fact. The police officer could have absolutely arrested OP for driving on an expired license. Why would you think that’s a joke? It’s actually a serious offense.
Only if you’re black. If you’re white, it’s laughable.
+1 There’s a Congressman who’s been pulled over for speeding three times in the last few months with a revoked license and nothing has happened to him.
Anonymous wrote:No. If you're in VA I think traffic court is basically part of criminal court. Like for example if I look myself up in the VA court system, I can see when I was pulled over for running a stop sign in college and it lists the officer who wrote my ticket as "arresting officer." I was not arrested. I went to court and paid $175.
Anonymous wrote:OP, this is pure speculation on my end but if the peace officer told you that, then he likely was making a sarcastic joke.
Which I would not think is very funny personally. 🫤
But to answer your question - no you won’t be going to jail for performing an illegal U-turn on an expired driver’s license.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any more info? I appreciate it.
What more do you want?!
Anonymous wrote:Any more info? I appreciate it.
Anonymous wrote:Arrest literally means stop. You were stopped (arrested.) The arresting officer was the stopping officer.Anonymous wrote:No. If you're in VA I think traffic court is basically part of criminal court. Like for example if I look myself up in the VA court system, I can see when I was pulled over for running a stop sign in college and it lists the officer who wrote my ticket as "arresting officer." I was not arrested. I went to court and paid $175.