Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP's post is inaccurate -- it's three tickets totaling $760:
One for 11-15 over the speed limit
One for 16-20 over the speed limit
One stop sign violation
Even if there was an effort to impound vehicles or take away licenses, this person would never be a priority.
It's not inaccurate. She said it's nearly a thousand dollars of tickets related to moving violations. $760 is nearly a thousand dollars and those are all moving violations.
I agree with this poster. The tickets themselves were probably less than 150 each. There’s a total of 3.
The rest are fines for non payment.
Per the reddit poster who found them and posted a pic, they are:
11/29/2025 - Speeding 11-15 Over Limit - $200
10/25/2025 - Running Stop Sign - $200
07/24/2025 - Speeding 16-20 Over Limit - $360
Virginia isn't going to lock up someone for that. You might need to retake the written exam. It's super easy to pass. I think you need a 85%.
Why does everyone think we want people locked up? Even OP has said she doesn't want to see people sent to jail for this.
And the driver isn't from Virginia. They're Maryland plates. Not sure why everyone keeps citing Virginia.
Probably because two-thirds of the drivers with the most outstanding tickets in DC are from Virginia, so we need to get Virginia drivers under control.
Keep in mind a fair number of the Virginia tags were likely owned by people who live in Maryland. The post ran a story about that the other day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello Karens!
You know the vast majority of out of state drivers pay their tickets, right? We have oodles of data on who gets tickets and who pays them. You can obsess about some random guy, but you should recognize that you're obsessing about a statistical outlier.
41 percent of tickets go to Maryland drivers, and 38 percent of tickets paid are paid by Marylanders. Virginians are worse. They get 27 percent of the tickets and pay 18 percent of the traffic fines.
The people who pay the least are the ones from outside the DMV, i.e. tourists.
We're not talking about people who pay their tickets. The people who are issued tickets and pay them are responsible citizens.
We are talking about the people who do NOT pay their tickets. Those people tend to not be responsible and thus, are not responsible drivers.
No one is obsessing over some random housewife from Chevy Chase or a "random dude from Bowie" who got caught speeding one time and paid her ticket. We're saying that habitual offenders, who continue to ignore tickets and continue to drive poorly, need to face some kind of consequence.
The number of people who don't pay their tickets is very small, and there can be a whole constellation of reasons why they haven't paid that have nothing to do with how they happen to drive.
Tickets in DC are crazy expensive, and they grow quickly if you don't pay right away. The costs, especailly when collections start getting involved, can snowball really fast and that probably deters a lot of people from paying.
This is probably a big factor. DC tickets are obscenely expensive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello Karens!
You know the vast majority of out of state drivers pay their tickets, right? We have oodles of data on who gets tickets and who pays them. You can obsess about some random guy, but you should recognize that you're obsessing about a statistical outlier.
41 percent of tickets go to Maryland drivers, and 38 percent of tickets paid are paid by Marylanders. Virginians are worse. They get 27 percent of the tickets and pay 18 percent of the traffic fines.
The people who pay the least are the ones from outside the DMV, i.e. tourists.
We're not talking about people who pay their tickets. The people who are issued tickets and pay them are responsible citizens.
We are talking about the people who do NOT pay their tickets. Those people tend to not be responsible and thus, are not responsible drivers.
No one is obsessing over some random housewife from Chevy Chase or a "random dude from Bowie" who got caught speeding one time and paid her ticket. We're saying that habitual offenders, who continue to ignore tickets and continue to drive poorly, need to face some kind of consequence.
The number of people who don't pay their tickets is very small, and there can be a whole constellation of reasons why they haven't paid that have nothing to do with how they happen to drive.
Tickets in DC are crazy expensive, and they grow quickly if you don't pay right away. The costs, especailly when collections start getting involved, can snowball really fast and that probably deters a lot of people from paying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP's post is inaccurate -- it's three tickets totaling $760:
One for 11-15 over the speed limit
One for 16-20 over the speed limit
One stop sign violation
Even if there was an effort to impound vehicles or take away licenses, this person would never be a priority.
It's not inaccurate. She said it's nearly a thousand dollars of tickets related to moving violations. $760 is nearly a thousand dollars and those are all moving violations.
I agree with this poster. The tickets themselves were probably less than 150 each. There’s a total of 3.
The rest are fines for non payment.
Per the reddit poster who found them and posted a pic, they are:
11/29/2025 - Speeding 11-15 Over Limit - $200
10/25/2025 - Running Stop Sign - $200
07/24/2025 - Speeding 16-20 Over Limit - $360
Virginia isn't going to lock up someone for that. You might need to retake the written exam. It's super easy to pass. I think you need a 85%.
Why does everyone think we want people locked up? Even OP has said she doesn't want to see people sent to jail for this.
And the driver isn't from Virginia. They're Maryland plates. Not sure why everyone keeps citing Virginia.
Probably because two-thirds of the drivers with the most outstanding tickets in DC are from Virginia, so we need to get Virginia drivers under control.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello Karens!
You know the vast majority of out of state drivers pay their tickets, right? We have oodles of data on who gets tickets and who pays them. You can obsess about some random guy, but you should recognize that you're obsessing about a statistical outlier.
41 percent of tickets go to Maryland drivers, and 38 percent of tickets paid are paid by Marylanders. Virginians are worse. They get 27 percent of the tickets and pay 18 percent of the traffic fines.
The people who pay the least are the ones from outside the DMV, i.e. tourists.
We're not talking about people who pay their tickets. The people who are issued tickets and pay them are responsible citizens.
We are talking about the people who do NOT pay their tickets. Those people tend to not be responsible and thus, are not responsible drivers.
No one is obsessing over some random housewife from Chevy Chase or a "random dude from Bowie" who got caught speeding one time and paid her ticket. We're saying that habitual offenders, who continue to ignore tickets and continue to drive poorly, need to face some kind of consequence.
The number of people who don't pay their tickets is very small, and there can be a whole constellation of reasons why they haven't paid that have nothing to do with how they happen to drive.
Tickets in DC are crazy expensive, and they grow quickly if you don't pay right away. The costs, especailly when collections start getting involved, can snowball really fast and that probably deters a lot of people from paying.
What collections? The person who hit the bus at Ambar this morning has a ticket from July. It's April. Clearly no collection effort has been made.
Have you ever gotten a traffic ticket? It does not take long before collections starting calling you. This idea that DC doesn't care if people don't pay your tickets is complete bullshit.
I have gotten a traffic ticket. Collections never called bc I paid it before the due date. Hope this helps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP's post is inaccurate -- it's three tickets totaling $760:
One for 11-15 over the speed limit
One for 16-20 over the speed limit
One stop sign violation
Even if there was an effort to impound vehicles or take away licenses, this person would never be a priority.
It's not inaccurate. She said it's nearly a thousand dollars of tickets related to moving violations. $760 is nearly a thousand dollars and those are all moving violations.
I agree with this poster. The tickets themselves were probably less than 150 each. There’s a total of 3.
The rest are fines for non payment.
Per the reddit poster who found them and posted a pic, they are:
11/29/2025 - Speeding 11-15 Over Limit - $200
10/25/2025 - Running Stop Sign - $200
07/24/2025 - Speeding 16-20 Over Limit - $360
Virginia isn't going to lock up someone for that. You might need to retake the written exam. It's super easy to pass. I think you need a 85%.
Why does everyone think we want people locked up? Even OP has said she doesn't want to see people sent to jail for this.
And the driver isn't from Virginia. They're Maryland plates. Not sure why everyone keeps citing Virginia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP's post is inaccurate -- it's three tickets totaling $760:
One for 11-15 over the speed limit
One for 16-20 over the speed limit
One stop sign violation
Even if there was an effort to impound vehicles or take away licenses, this person would never be a priority.
It's not inaccurate. She said it's nearly a thousand dollars of tickets related to moving violations. $760 is nearly a thousand dollars and those are all moving violations.
I agree with this poster. The tickets themselves were probably less than 150 each. There’s a total of 3.
The rest are fines for non payment.
Per the reddit poster who found them and posted a pic, they are:
11/29/2025 - Speeding 11-15 Over Limit - $200
10/25/2025 - Running Stop Sign - $200
07/24/2025 - Speeding 16-20 Over Limit - $360
Virginia isn't going to lock up someone for that. You might need to retake the written exam. It's super easy to pass. I think you need a 85%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP's post is inaccurate -- it's three tickets totaling $760:
One for 11-15 over the speed limit
One for 16-20 over the speed limit
One stop sign violation
Even if there was an effort to impound vehicles or take away licenses, this person would never be a priority.
It's not inaccurate. She said it's nearly a thousand dollars of tickets related to moving violations. $760 is nearly a thousand dollars and those are all moving violations.
I agree with this poster. The tickets themselves were probably less than 150 each. There’s a total of 3.
The rest are fines for non payment.
Per the reddit poster who found them and posted a pic, they are:
11/29/2025 - Speeding 11-15 Over Limit - $200
10/25/2025 - Running Stop Sign - $200
07/24/2025 - Speeding 16-20 Over Limit - $360
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello Karens!
You know the vast majority of out of state drivers pay their tickets, right? We have oodles of data on who gets tickets and who pays them. You can obsess about some random guy, but you should recognize that you're obsessing about a statistical outlier.
41 percent of tickets go to Maryland drivers, and 38 percent of tickets paid are paid by Marylanders. Virginians are worse. They get 27 percent of the tickets and pay 18 percent of the traffic fines.
The people who pay the least are the ones from outside the DMV, i.e. tourists.
We're not talking about people who pay their tickets. The people who are issued tickets and pay them are responsible citizens.
We are talking about the people who do NOT pay their tickets. Those people tend to not be responsible and thus, are not responsible drivers.
No one is obsessing over some random housewife from Chevy Chase or a "random dude from Bowie" who got caught speeding one time and paid her ticket. We're saying that habitual offenders, who continue to ignore tickets and continue to drive poorly, need to face some kind of consequence.
The number of people who don't pay their tickets is very small, and there can be a whole constellation of reasons why they haven't paid that have nothing to do with how they happen to drive.
Tickets in DC are crazy expensive, and they grow quickly if you don't pay right away. The costs, especailly when collections start getting involved, can snowball really fast and that probably deters a lot of people from paying.
What collections? The person who hit the bus at Ambar this morning has a ticket from July. It's April. Clearly no collection effort has been made.
Have you ever gotten a traffic ticket? It does not take long before collections starting calling you. This idea that DC doesn't care if people don't pay your tickets is complete bullshit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't need a driver's license to drive. They aren't going to lock someone up in Fairfax County, Arlington, or Alexandria for unpaid tickets.
I don't expect them to lock people up. Start with suspending licenses and since you're right, these people will continue to drive with a suspended license, move on to booting or impounding the cars.
So your solution to scofflaw drivers is to … suspend their license?
Yes, that will surely fix things. Perhaps a sternly worded letter as well?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello Karens!
You know the vast majority of out of state drivers pay their tickets, right? We have oodles of data on who gets tickets and who pays them. You can obsess about some random guy, but you should recognize that you're obsessing about a statistical outlier.
41 percent of tickets go to Maryland drivers, and 38 percent of tickets paid are paid by Marylanders. Virginians are worse. They get 27 percent of the tickets and pay 18 percent of the traffic fines.
The people who pay the least are the ones from outside the DMV, i.e. tourists.
We're not talking about people who pay their tickets. The people who are issued tickets and pay them are responsible citizens.
We are talking about the people who do NOT pay their tickets. Those people tend to not be responsible and thus, are not responsible drivers.
No one is obsessing over some random housewife from Chevy Chase or a "random dude from Bowie" who got caught speeding one time and paid her ticket. We're saying that habitual offenders, who continue to ignore tickets and continue to drive poorly, need to face some kind of consequence.
The number of people who don't pay their tickets is very small, and there can be a whole constellation of reasons why they haven't paid that have nothing to do with how they happen to drive.
Tickets in DC are crazy expensive, and they grow quickly if you don't pay right away. The costs, especailly when collections start getting involved, can snowball really fast and that probably deters a lot of people from paying.
What collections? The person who hit the bus at Ambar this morning has a ticket from July. It's April. Clearly no collection effort has been made.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello Karens!
You know the vast majority of out of state drivers pay their tickets, right? We have oodles of data on who gets tickets and who pays them. You can obsess about some random guy, but you should recognize that you're obsessing about a statistical outlier.
41 percent of tickets go to Maryland drivers, and 38 percent of tickets paid are paid by Marylanders. Virginians are worse. They get 27 percent of the tickets and pay 18 percent of the traffic fines.
The people who pay the least are the ones from outside the DMV, i.e. tourists.
We're not talking about people who pay their tickets. The people who are issued tickets and pay them are responsible citizens.
We are talking about the people who do NOT pay their tickets. Those people tend to not be responsible and thus, are not responsible drivers.
No one is obsessing over some random housewife from Chevy Chase or a "random dude from Bowie" who got caught speeding one time and paid her ticket. We're saying that habitual offenders, who continue to ignore tickets and continue to drive poorly, need to face some kind of consequence.
The number of people who don't pay their tickets is very small, and there can be a whole constellation of reasons why they haven't paid that have nothing to do with how they happen to drive.
Tickets in DC are crazy expensive, and they grow quickly if you don't pay right away. The costs, especailly when collections start getting involved, can snowball really fast and that probably deters a lot of people from paying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you guys also go through court records in search of people who've been arrested 40 times? And then worry that maybe you'll be their next victim? Like, maybe tomorrow they'll show up at your house and rob you?
I mean, yeah, if someone's been arrested 40 times, I would wonder why they hadn't faced serious consequences yet.
Are you serious? Do you even live in DC? They don't prosecute anyone for anything. The *average* murder suspect has previously been arrested 11 times.
Yes, I am serious. I do live in DC and I have a problem with how we handle crime in this city, as do many people. Step out of your bubble and talk to people.
And yet you will surely vote for Janeese for mayor. They don't make 'em any softer on crime than JLG.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP's post is inaccurate -- it's three tickets totaling $760:
One for 11-15 over the speed limit
One for 16-20 over the speed limit
One stop sign violation
Even if there was an effort to impound vehicles or take away licenses, this person would never be a priority.
It's not inaccurate. She said it's nearly a thousand dollars of tickets related to moving violations. $760 is nearly a thousand dollars and those are all moving violations.
I agree with this poster. The tickets themselves were probably less than 150 each. There’s a total of 3.
The rest are fines for non payment.
Per the reddit poster who found them and posted a pic, they are:
11/29/2025 - Speeding 11-15 Over Limit - $200
10/25/2025 - Running Stop Sign - $200
07/24/2025 - Speeding 16-20 Over Limit - $360
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello Karens!
You know the vast majority of out of state drivers pay their tickets, right? We have oodles of data on who gets tickets and who pays them. You can obsess about some random guy, but you should recognize that you're obsessing about a statistical outlier.
41 percent of tickets go to Maryland drivers, and 38 percent of tickets paid are paid by Marylanders. Virginians are worse. They get 27 percent of the tickets and pay 18 percent of the traffic fines.
The people who pay the least are the ones from outside the DMV, i.e. tourists.
We're not talking about people who pay their tickets. The people who are issued tickets and pay them are responsible citizens.
We are talking about the people who do NOT pay their tickets. Those people tend to not be responsible and thus, are not responsible drivers.
No one is obsessing over some random housewife from Chevy Chase or a "random dude from Bowie" who got caught speeding one time and paid her ticket. We're saying that habitual offenders, who continue to ignore tickets and continue to drive poorly, need to face some kind of consequence.
The number of people who don't pay their tickets is very small, and there can be a whole constellation of reasons why they haven't paid that have nothing to do with how they happen to drive.