Follow-up to my other post: Red Light Camera Ticket in Van Nuys, CA.
I won my case and was found not guilty! Trial held August 25th in Van Nuys.
No more theorizing, no more what ifs, no more guessing.
I beat the red light camera ticket by being prepared, logical, and presenting evidence which caused reasonable doubt.
The point I want to make since I went through this ordeal and won is this:
1. Never use a Pro Tem judge. They are useless. Get a real judge to try your case, which is what I did. I declined the Pro Tem judge for my trial and while waiting to get reassigned to another court, I watched this one in action. Utterly useless (disinterested) - could not care less to the testimony being presented. Found everyone guilty. The judge I was assigned to was fair and just, and helpful as he saw me struggle presenting my case without the aid of a lawyer, although he came pretty close to throwing my father out, who sat in the spectator section providing moral support, and who would grunt or groan or shake his head yes or no when he heard the officer say something I should challenge or focus on.
2. If you get a red light camera ticket, fight it, fight it, fight it! Disregard all the negative advice you read about on these posts. If you have the time and determination, fight the ticket. While waiting to be reassigned, and just before trial was to start, about 8 red light camera tickets were dismissed by the officer who represented the city/camera company. I ran out and asked a few of the accused why their ticket was dismissed and they said their face was blocked by the mirror - he showed me. The point I want to make here is these weasel sheriff department officers who speak on behalf of the ACS vendor and city (it was a Metro ticket from a busway camera), will do everything in their powers to get you to pay, until the absolute last second before the trial is to start. I found it disgusting they would wait knowing they did not have enough evidence to stand up during a trial hoping the accused would cave in and pay up. Never give in - always fight the ticket as you have nothing to lose! These people will try to grind you down and make you give in. If your face is blocked or you have reasonable evidence to present, fight the ticket. Do not be a sucker!
3. Take photo's, cite examples, and prepare a written script to keep your thoughts focused and on track. Do not be afraid to speak up or challenge what the officer is saying. Get educated on what you can and cannot do. My dad spent a lot of his time doing the background work on all of this for me. Collectively, if he were to charge for his time, he spent about $2,000 [for his time] doing all the research and preparation, and helping me learn and prepare. To him and I, it was well worth it for this $480 ticket and to deal with a system [red light camera program] designed to fleece the public. Again, it was well worth it!
4. Have multiple avenues to quote and use in your defense. Do not just have one line of defense. I cited Khaled - denied; California Vs. Bohl - denied [unpublished], etc. In other words, I kept presenting items until something would stick.
I beat my ticket because the busway intersection on White Oak @ Busway in Van Nuys is right next to another intersection. This is a poorly designed intersection in that the first signal (monitored by the camera) is about 2 to 3 car lengths in front of another signal. The photos I took showed the first signals yellow light, with the signal for the 2nd intersection green (directly in back of this one). The judge felt this was confusing, and based on my testimony that the light was yellow when the camera went off, since I was there and the officer was not, I was found NOT GUILTY!
Again, no theory but reality here. I beat a system which is designed to wear you down,stacked against you, where you are guilty until proven innocent - don't kid yourself!
I won my case and was found not guilty! Trial held August 25th in Van Nuys.
No more theorizing, no more what ifs, no more guessing.
I beat the red light camera ticket by being prepared, logical, and presenting evidence which caused reasonable doubt.
The point I want to make since I went through this ordeal and won is this:
1. Never use a Pro Tem judge. They are useless. Get a real judge to try your case, which is what I did. I declined the Pro Tem judge for my trial and while waiting to get reassigned to another court, I watched this one in action. Utterly useless (disinterested) - could not care less to the testimony being presented. Found everyone guilty. The judge I was assigned to was fair and just, and helpful as he saw me struggle presenting my case without the aid of a lawyer, although he came pretty close to throwing my father out, who sat in the spectator section providing moral support, and who would grunt or groan or shake his head yes or no when he heard the officer say something I should challenge or focus on.
2. If you get a red light camera ticket, fight it, fight it, fight it! Disregard all the negative advice you read about on these posts. If you have the time and determination, fight the ticket. While waiting to be reassigned, and just before trial was to start, about 8 red light camera tickets were dismissed by the officer who represented the city/camera company. I ran out and asked a few of the accused why their ticket was dismissed and they said their face was blocked by the mirror - he showed me. The point I want to make here is these weasel sheriff department officers who speak on behalf of the ACS vendor and city (it was a Metro ticket from a busway camera), will do everything in their powers to get you to pay, until the absolute last second before the trial is to start. I found it disgusting they would wait knowing they did not have enough evidence to stand up during a trial hoping the accused would cave in and pay up. Never give in - always fight the ticket as you have nothing to lose! These people will try to grind you down and make you give in. If your face is blocked or you have reasonable evidence to present, fight the ticket. Do not be a sucker!
3. Take photo's, cite examples, and prepare a written script to keep your thoughts focused and on track. Do not be afraid to speak up or challenge what the officer is saying. Get educated on what you can and cannot do. My dad spent a lot of his time doing the background work on all of this for me. Collectively, if he were to charge for his time, he spent about $2,000 [for his time] doing all the research and preparation, and helping me learn and prepare. To him and I, it was well worth it for this $480 ticket and to deal with a system [red light camera program] designed to fleece the public. Again, it was well worth it!
4. Have multiple avenues to quote and use in your defense. Do not just have one line of defense. I cited Khaled - denied; California Vs. Bohl - denied [unpublished], etc. In other words, I kept presenting items until something would stick.
I beat my ticket because the busway intersection on White Oak @ Busway in Van Nuys is right next to another intersection. This is a poorly designed intersection in that the first signal (monitored by the camera) is about 2 to 3 car lengths in front of another signal. The photos I took showed the first signals yellow light, with the signal for the 2nd intersection green (directly in back of this one). The judge felt this was confusing, and based on my testimony that the light was yellow when the camera went off, since I was there and the officer was not, I was found NOT GUILTY!
Again, no theory but reality here. I beat a system which is designed to wear you down,stacked against you, where you are guilty until proven innocent - don't kid yourself!
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