JoeCarQuestion
Junior Member
After a recent conversation with a friend, I’m just curious to learn something regarding an old case that is now over for me:
In New York State, does a cop have the right to ticket you for a traffic violation which he/she did not witness, no other cop witnessed, and no camera captured?
In my example: I was standing outside my car, opening the door to get in, and another driver came from around a curve in the road, hit the edge of my door (missing hitting me by a matter of inches). After the mini-accident, the other driver called the police, and an officer arrived about five to ten minutes later. After the officer listened to the story from me and the other driver, he ticketed me for “opening the door unsafely.”
Now, regardless of who you think is at fault here, should the cop have had the right to ticket me for something he never saw?
(I’m not stating the cop did or do not have the right. I’m just curious to learn). Thank you.
In New York State, does a cop have the right to ticket you for a traffic violation which he/she did not witness, no other cop witnessed, and no camera captured?
In my example: I was standing outside my car, opening the door to get in, and another driver came from around a curve in the road, hit the edge of my door (missing hitting me by a matter of inches). After the mini-accident, the other driver called the police, and an officer arrived about five to ten minutes later. After the officer listened to the story from me and the other driver, he ticketed me for “opening the door unsafely.”
Now, regardless of who you think is at fault here, should the cop have had the right to ticket me for something he never saw?
(I’m not stating the cop did or do not have the right. I’m just curious to learn). Thank you.