I live in a state where a police officer doesn't have to appear in court for a traffic violation. But they must appear if subpoenaed.
My question is this, I just got the speeding ticket. I do not have an assigned contested hearing date yet. Should I file my subpoenas now, even though I have no date for document or witness appearance yet? Do I need a specific court date to subpoena? I'm going to subpoena officer and some documents. Note: its a minor speeding ticket.
You intend to subpoena an adverse witness?! Did you over indulge on holiday fruit cake?
What do you intend to do with the officer when he shows up for the trial? Call him as a witness?
If so, are you aware that you cannot ask him leading questions as if he were under cross-examination? That you cannot impeach your own witness's testimony with other evidence even though it may exist, including your own testimony?
That his testimony will support the charges against you and carry more weight than yours? And that it won't bury you?
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Now about these "
documents".
Regardless of what they may contain, relevant or not, how do you intend to obtain them? Where and are they kept and in whose custody? Is it you intention to do a subpoena duces tecum on the officer directing that he produce in court some specifically described document or documents?
What if he shows up and explains that they are not within is custody and control? Do you think the judge is going to send him back to the station and gather them up?
And suppose that somehow the officer does produce the wanted documents. How do you intend to have them authenticated and submit into the record and getting around the hearsay evidence rule without having some individual that is charge of them testify as to their accuracy, where and how they are maintained, when they were prepared and done so in the normal course of business?
And if you are thinking of the police report, forget that. It is inadmissible hearsay.
Pay the bloody ticket!