It Is Finished! (ProfMTH Gets Married)
Posted by | Posted in Public Marriage Records | Posted on 15-01-2012
Madalyn Murray O’Hair: The Rosary Wars (1959-1963)- Atheos Records Dedication
Posted by | Posted in Public Birth Records | Posted on 15-01-2012
Police cannot access defendants Internet records State v Reid
Posted by | Posted in New Jersey Court Records | Posted on 04-01-2012
Police cannot access defendants Internet records. State v. Reid 194 NJ 386 (2008) Pursuant to Article I, Paragraph 7, of the New Jersey Constitution, the Court holds that citizens have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the subscriber information they provide to Internet service providers. Accordingly, the motion to suppress by defendant Reid was properly granted because the police used a deficient municipal subpoena. Law enforcement officials can obtain subscriber information by serving a grand jury subpoena on an Internet service provider without notice to the subscriber. The State may seek to reacquire the information with a proper grand jury subpoena because records of the information existed independently of the faulty process used by the police, and the conduct of the police did not affect the information. Criminal defense by KENNETH VERCAMMEN & ASSOCIATES, PC ATTORNEY AT LAW 2053 Woodbridge Ave. Edison, NJ 08817 (Phone) 732-572-0500 (Fax) 732-572-0030 website: www.njlaws.com
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Washington State Speeding Ticket – should I go to court?
Posted by | Posted in Washington Court Records | Posted on 02-01-2012
Question by mad cabbages: Washington State Speeding Ticket – should I go to court?
I received a ticket last Friday on a washington state highway between Spokane and Pullman. The officer asked me how fast I was going and I told him I was doing 10 over. I received a ticket for $ 113 and was told I could contest in court.
I’ve never had a speeding ticket before – if I were to go to court, what are some tips? Could I get this ticket removed from my record?
Could the fee be lessened? What should I say?
Best answer:
Answer by Rock Firestorm
You admitted to speeding, you have no case. And cops do not make up tickets. Going to court would only add court fees to your fines. Just pay it off.
Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!





