Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - wow! this is surprising - we have 50+ violations or so...from my husband going to and from work. I would hope EZPass can remove the violations for those that are still in their jurisdiction. I have forwarded the evidence of our car registration, but it didn't sound like they'd retroactively remove the fines (worth calling again!). With those already in collections, it seems we are destined for court, or else work with them on their first offense program (they'll reduce the fines, but not sure by how much) - it's worth asking. thanks
I'm fairly certain it's not the license plate that is the issue here. I'm betting you did not have a valid credit card linked to your account.
If your EZPass is on any car and linked to a valid and current credit card such that the toll can be paid, you would not get a violation. You might get a warning, but again, if the toll was paid I have not found it to be a problem.
If your EZPass is on a registered car and fails to work (yes, the batteries on the EZPass die and you need a new EZPass), the EZPass system can bill you based on your license plate. This has happened to me several times - once all up and down 95 - and I did not get any violations. I did get a new EZPass transponder.
OP, have you looked at your credit card linked to your EZPass to show that it is valid? Have you looked at your credit card receipts to see that the tolls were paid?
Anonymous wrote:I agree OP should have taken this more seriously and certainly not have let it get to 7000 bucks but the EZ Pass fines are seriously out of control and they start multiplying really quickly.
I think they are really fleecing the public. OP should have taken care of it but no one should be on the hook for 7000 dollars because they forgot to change a license plate over. That is the type of thing that could completely bankrupt some people and is just not proportional to the crime.
Anonymous wrote: Ignoring 50 violations is not "an honest mistake." I don't think any court is going to buy the "we have new baby excuse."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is crazy. We move our EZpass from car to car, without issue. I believe only one vehicle is officially registered. As long as the pass has money in the account, it auto-deducts the toll without paying attention to the license plate.
- MD side
It doesn't always work that way. If you've been lucky so far, that's great, but my bother has gotten in trouble like the OP for lending someone his EZ pass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does the license plate matter at all? If the EZpass is in the car properly, it reads that, not the license plate.
We just went through this. Husband got a new car, I didn't update the car in our account, we traveled over Xmas and I started getting notices for unpaid tolls. I assumed our transponder wasn't working. Turns out, for the low speed tolls, it reads the transponder. For the higher speed tolls that are everywhere now, it is too fast to read the transponder so it snaps a pic of your license plate and then they match it to your EZ Pass account and debit your account. But, if your license plate is not updated, you get a notice in the mail for an unpaid toll. OP, I called as soon as I got the notices and resolved the issue. If you pay right away, there's no penalty and they just charge you the price of the toll that you went through. So how on earth did you wait until after you got 50 notices to do anything??