Carl, as I indicated, the example I gave (broken light) is not the same as the one in my situation. I chose that one because it is as unrelated to my charge as is the item on the officer's list.CdwJava said:Ultimately, why object to something unrelated such as the broken tail lens? What woudl it matter? It certainly does not go proving the offense of speeding, so why object? How would it bias the case against the defendant when it does nothing to further the prosecution?
- Carl
The reason I would like it not to be introduced or mentioned in court is on the off chance that the judge reasons one of these ways:
1. Heck, the officer let you off with that charge, so why are you complaining now about this charge?
OR
2. I see here that you have a propensity for breaking the law. That's not good.