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72 points

That doesn’t mean anything in a lot of countries.

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9 points

Is going to court over traffic violations common internationally? I thought that was a US thing

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25 points

I challenged a licence suspension in Australia when I was 19 years old. I gladly paid the $560 fine but I would’ve lost my licence for three months because I was driving 7km/h over the limit on a ‘double-demerits’ weekend. The magistrate sent me to a fortnightly driver’s course for 12 weeks, all the while I kept my licence, and after the course was over I fronted court again and successfully argued my three month suspension down to four weeks.

I’m pretty sure that going to court over traffic violations is a thing in any country that allows going to court over traffic violations.

FYI in most Australian jurisdictions, you can’t demand that the individual police officer who fined you attend court to defend themselves. That part is most likely a US thing.

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26 points

All that over 7kmh? Holy shit, most cops in the usa won’t bother you doing 9mph over on highways and like 5-7mph on normal roads.

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17 points

French guy here: I went to court once because the cop lied and needed tickets for his quota. I had all the proofs. The judge basically told me “I don’t give a fuck, you pay.” It’s useless.

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27 points

Maybe don’t be French next time.

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1 point

It’s not as much of a thing but people do object fines, most commonly mail-in fines when the owner wasn’t driving.

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1 point

Is going to court over traffic violations common internationally? I thought that was a US thing

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