I know the obvious of being polite and respectful. do I show up early like an airport? Do I just show the guard my ticket? Anything I should know or be aware of?

  • jagged_circle@feddit.nl
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    2 months ago

    Tell the judge you’re a sovereign citizen and he has no authority over you. If they try to touch you, just call “help! I’m being kidnapped!”

  • y0kai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    Don’t wear a hat. Judges HATE hats.

    Idk what hats ever did but they’re automatically guilty in a court room.

  • Cenzorrll@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I’m a bit late, but I used to testify in DUI cases and have sat through many court sessions.

    First, you didn’t commit a crime, you made an oopsie. Don’t stress out too much, a lot of people just don’t show up, you’re a light in the dark for just showing up.

    Wear nice clothes, put together the best you can with what you have, don’t go buy a suit for traffic court. Slacks and a collared shirt (no visible holes or worn spots) is typically enough, especially if you’re living paycheck to paycheck. Save your money for fixing the situation, not looking nice. Looking nice does help and shows respect to the court (judge) but trying to fix things on your own without them intervening makes you look even better.

    Explain that you made a mistake and accidentally let it lapse. Talk to the public defender if you can. They are overloaded with cases but will help, court proceedings and the language they can use is confusing.

    Try to make amends now, renew your license, sign up for whatever you need to sign up for, if you can’t afford to renew let the judge know that you’re walking/biking/bussing to work until you can afford to renew/sign up/etc. Ask the court for mercy since you have a clean record to the best of your knowledge and are already taking steps to remedy the situation.

    Be very nice, the judge is the law in their courtroom, the only person with more power is the court stenographer because they get to correct the judge.

    Bring receipts or any proof that you have of what you’re doing.

    As many have said DO NOT DRIVE YOURSELF TO COURT.

  • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    Don’t argue with the court or the judge, keep your personal comments to yourself. If you disagree with the ruling, keep your mouth shut about it, thank the judge regardless of the outcome.

    A lot of “turn the other cheek” applies here. Anything less and you will be held in contempt of court and it will make things worse.

    Listen carefully, speak when it’s your turn to speak, don’t talk over anyone, especially the judge.

    Beyond that, be honest, and don’t conceal the truth. Do everything you can to be a good participant in the system. Arrive early and if you can, watch what others do and learn from their actions. What they do, what they say, and especially what not to say or do.

    You’ll be fine at the end of the day.

    Also renew your damn license ASAP. Don’t drive the vehicle that got the infraction (duh), and if possible, get a ride to the courthouse and back again, whether that’s a friend, a taxi, an Uber/Lyft, it doesn’t matter. If the judge decides to put you in jail (unlikely, but possible) you don’t have to worry about your vehicle being towed or something, and you won’t get additional fines as you travel there.

    All the best OP. You got this.

    • LeadersAtWork@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Two final things: If you do accidentally speak over the judge apologize and admit your mistake.

      On that same vein, be honest, especially with simple responses. We hear mostly about the bad judges in the system. Reality is most are fine and will treat you fairly, if you treat them and the court with respect.

  • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Dress as well as you can, be on time or a little early, don’t piss off the judge.

    Be honest.

    if you’re wanting to talk to somebody before hand… they should have a public defender you can speak to. Bring relevant paperwork.

    • Tiefling IRL@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      Be prepared for the public defender to ask you two questions then shun you the rest of the day while they tend to their other 30 clients that day

      • Aeao@lemmy.worldOP
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        2 months ago

        Do I need a public defender? I didn’t intentionally do anything wrong I just didn’t know my license was expired? I’ve got a clean record it was just a mistake.

        • algorithmae@lemmy.sdf.org
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          Probably not. By the sounds of it, it’s “just” traffic court… You’ll be herded into a courtroom with a couple dozen others, and each of you will be called in turn to speak to the judge. Kinda like a pop quiz. You’ll be told your charge and be asked a few questions. If you’re polite and genuine you’ll likely get off easy, since people LOVE to fight back and dig their hole deeper.

          Back in high school I was in a similar situation, and basically got it completely dismissed because I was young and it was my first ever infraction.

          IANAL

          • Aeao@lemmy.worldOP
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            2 months ago

            Yeah,.even ignoring the joke comments that are funny, alot of people are saying I should fight. I doubt that would be a good idea. It was an honest mistake and I’ve got a clean record. I think being honest is my best bet.

            • CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              2 months ago

              Traffic court, while yes it’s a court of law, is a bit more relaxed. Judges have far more leeway and they have a long docket.

              You’re not the only one being seen and the judge wants to go home on time.

              Be honest, courteous. In the rare event that the police officer starts saying things that are completely egregious, plead the fifth and ask for a continuance. Tell the judge that these facts are new to you and you’ll need time to assert a defense.

              The judge may ask what you thought the charges were. Say something along the lines of, “Without waiving my fifth amendment right to self incrimination, my understanding is that I’m being charged for driving with an expired license.”

              But this should be rare. Judges don’t like surprises either.

              Again, remember that this is traffic court. Everyone is busy. If you’re a dick, they won’t have patience for you.

            • deranger@sh.itjust.works
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              I went to court for a traffic ticket and the cop didn’t show up, so I didn’t get charged with anything. Poof, gone. Just be honest and courteous and you’ll be as fine as you can be given the situation.

            • thermal_shock@lemmy.world
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              if you didn’t go to jail, not that big of a deal. get it fixed, go to court and explain. mistakes happen, you didn’t run anyone over. you might get a fine, shit happens.

              it’s public too, go to your local court during traffic court, you can sit in. usually early morning, listen to other cases and see how it works, then you’ll have a better idea.

              • Cadeillac@lemmy.world
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                2 months ago

                get it fixed

                I’ve heard of people having luck going in with their renewed license. I can’t attest to it personally, and of course your mileage may vary

                • thermal_shock@lemmy.world
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                  2 months ago

                  this is what I’d do. especially if it was an honest mistake, fix it, show you’re not a problem, move on.

            • bluGill@fedia.io
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              2 months ago

              depends on your state but generally fighting will cost you a lot oi time and you lose anyway - then the judge mad at the waste of time throws the max fine or even jail at you. Just plead guilty pay the $50 fine and move on - it probably will be that cheap.

        • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】@lemmy.world
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          When I used to work in a prosecutor’s office, in a situation like this where the person has a clean record and comes in for an expired license, as long as you renewed the license before your court date, we would just dismiss the charges as long as you’re respectful of the court and the process. Dress well. If court opens at 9:00 a.m., get there at 8:30 a.m.

          You will see defense attorneys milling about. You could ask one of them where to go to talk to a prosecutor. Usually prosecutors would start calling cases at 8:30 a.m. to make deals and see what defenses people are going to raise before the judge began calling the docket.

          Just talk about how squeaky clean your record is and how you didn’t know your license was expired, how you went and got it renewed as soon as you found out, and you’d appreciate it if they’d dropped on your promise never to meet again.

          I assume this is not for a trial appearance. This is a preliminary proceeding. Procedure may be completely different in your state.

          I am not your lawyer.

        • 474D@lemmy.world
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          Dude it’s your first offense. Just go in there dressed nice, when asked, plead guilty with a request for leniency while being completely honest. They will most likely give you a slap on the wrist and make you pay for the court fees. That’s it.

        • BalooWasWahoo@links.hackliberty.org
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          You might not even get a public defender. Is an expired license at the same level as a speeding ticket in your area? If so, your government might only assign public defenders to ‘criminal’ charges with potential jail times. Just be aware of that before you start desperately trying to find one that doesn’t ‘exist.’

        • SzethFriendOfNimi@lemmy.world
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          I’d still take one if that’s an option. A lawyer isn’t just somebody to defend you. They’re the ones best suited to guide you through the legal process.

          You want the court to know it was a mistake? Ok, here’s how we argue that in such a way that it’s not admitting fault for some other legal aspect you need to be mindful of. And here’s a point we can make to see if they’ll change it to this other violation that has less of a penalty or doesn’t result in large premium increases with your insurance.

          • Aeao@lemmy.worldOP
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            2 months ago

            That’s something to consider. I just don’t want to seem like I’m being difficult to the judge.

            • bluGill@fedia.io
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              2 months ago

              If you know a lawer ask, but odds are they wilh say you are better off without them for something this small.

        • Spiralvortexisalie@lemmy.world
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          Don’t know where you are from but at least in 🦅 country you have a right to counsel. Thats works out to usually being assigned counsel (public defender) as soon as possible in the interest of justice. For a standard ticket you will probably have this settled within two court dates, your fees and other associated charges may not be so nice.

          • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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            You only have that right when it’s a charge with a certain amount of weight, like prison time or a felony.

            • Spiralvortexisalie@lemmy.world
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              Any “Serious crime” which the SCOTUS delineated long ago as anything where you may face more than 6 months incarceration which lines up with just about anything.

              • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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                Oh you’d be surprised what they’ve stuck under it. For example there’s a whole cottage industry in sending people to prison for being unable to pay debt. Said debt was incurred on a misdemeanor with no prison time so there was no lawyer and the debtor’s prison isn’t a trial so there’s still no lawyer.

  • Chozo@fedia.io
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    If you haven’t already renewed your license, do not drive yourself to court. I know that probably sounds obvious, but people still manage to get in trouble doing that. I’d actually recommend taking an Uber or something if your license is still expired; you can get a ride from a friend, but an Uber will at least give you a receipt that you can present to the court in case it gets brought up (and they will ask “How did you get here today?” if you’re still expired).

    • Aeao@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 months ago

      I thought of that. I saw the viral video with that dude driving during his video court.

      I was going to walk. It’s a small town and I walk a lot as a hobby anyway.

      Since I realized my license was expired I’ve been walking to work and to the store. Again it’s a very small town and I can walk just about everywhere.

      However if they are going to ask I might want some proof…no can’t afford an Uber right now but maybe I could take some pictures of my walk? Or take the bus just to have a bus ticket?

        • bluGill@fedia.io
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          They will ask how you got there. Don’t lie if they catch you in a lie that is bad. Walking is fine tell them they can send an officer to verify your car is at home. Move it to the driveway if in a garrage - don’t move it off you property though. They probably won’t check but make it easy if they do check.

          • mvirts@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            You can offer that your car is not parked in the parking lot. No one will check but if there are cameras they have the option of checking later.

      • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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        Proving that you did something wrong is on them. If you walk, they’ll see that you arrived on foot and that’s good enough. (They’ll have all the lot entrances with plate reading cameras, so they can tell if you’re driving.)

        It’s sufficient to just walk, they won’t be able to prove that you drove in since, well, you didn’t.

        But, eh, bored cops might like to double check. You might be able to finagle a lift home if they do.

      • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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        2 months ago

        The burden of proof is on them. IANAL, but I would advise against trying to prove anything. If you want to argue against something then the burden of proof is on them and they don’t have it, so just shut up and sit quietly and respectfully.

      • Someplaceunknown@fedia.io
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        However if they are going to ask I might want some proof…no can’t afford an Uber right now but maybe I could take some pictures of my walk? Or take the bus just to have a bus ticket?

        Film your entire walk to court

  • Pacattack57@lemmy.world
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    Go to the dmv asap to get the license, ideally before court. If you get it done, show your new license to the court and they will dismiss your case, (hopefully)

  • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    Court? For an experience license? Where do you live?

    I was pulled over for speeding and my license was expired. I got a ticket for my license being expired )which wasn’t that expensive) and the cop told me I couldn’t drive home. I asked her if she’d drive me home because it was one of the worst days of my life (long story) and she told me she’d be happy to. She did not give me a speeding ticket. My mate drove me to renew my license, and I mailed in the 85-ish USD for the ticket. No court.

  • NecroParagon@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    I’ve been to court a few times, once for a traffic incident where I hit a pole and totaled my car. Got an improper lane usage ticket. I just showed up in regular clothes, went to the front desk thing and asked where my courtroom was. They made us wait outside of it until it was time. Then I just plead guilty or whatever and had to do one of those driving classes. I wouldn’t worry too much. Yours isn’t that serious either.

    Honestly kinda shit of the cop to make you go to begin with.

    • lud@lemm.ee
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      Honestly kinda shit of the cop to make you go to begin with.

      I thought you really only had to get to court if you denied settling the matter with the cop there and then. So you are not forced to go to court but if you want to dispute the ticket you have to go to court.

      • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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        It depends, in some areas that part where you either accept by default or choose another option is part of court. In my area they clear out everyone who is taking the default judgment at the beginning and then go through the rest one at a time.

      • NecroParagon@lemm.ee
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        I had to go. It was a stipulation on the offence, at least where I lived at the time. It was just enough of a violation that I had to appear to receive judgment or whatever you might call it.

        Also to note I hit the pole intentionally at speed. I was on new medication at the time and it kinda fucked me up. I guess I was trying to kill myself. Poor attempt, but I have trouble understanding my thinking during that time. Don’t take Abilify if you’re young if you can help it.

  • muculent@lemmy.world
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    If it was just a traffic ticket you can hire a traffic lawyer for fairly cheap if you don’t want to go to court or would like the comfort of someone there for you who does this often. In CA, I’ve seen this typically cost around $50 for handling a traffic ticket. They can get most tickets dismissed or at the very least the fine reduced. If a cop no shows it gets dismissed.

    Best to get it renewed asap though as previous commenters suggested, then it becomes a non-issue, so a trip to the DMV might be a good idea. I’d head your DMV website since the address varies depending on the state you’re in. Renewing a REAL ID may require you take a short refresher course and provide two documents that prove residency, one that proves identity (US Passport, previous license, SSA card, etc) they’ll tell you what you need on there though.

    • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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      Why could an expired license possibly require court? It’s an administrative issue at best, should require a 50 dollar fine for the mistake and we all move on

      The US legal system is a giant abusive mess

      • muculent@lemmy.world
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        Agreed. Unfortunately this is what happens when you attach dollar amounts to key performance indicators for effectiveness with policing. Fines = revenue for government so they try where they can. It’s why carpool lanes are so heavily policed here. The base fine rate is higher.

      • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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        Oh you are in for a treat. I spent time in the local jail when I was much younger, and was surprised that some of my fellow inmates were in there for some absurd things. The two that stick out are:

        1. Driving without a license - apparently if you do this more than once, good chance they will just take you jail and impound your car, and if you can’t afford bail you wait until court, which is weeks or months.

        2. Unpaid child support - I actually have no idea the logic here. You have unpaid child support, so we will put you in jail, charge you 30$ per day to be paid upon release for “housing”, and guarantee you have no way to earn money.

        The bail and housing fees are not actually specific to those crimes, it applies to all crimes but really compounds things in some situations.

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    We have no clue where you are so we can’t give any good advice. For all we know you live in Elbonia and driving without a license gets you the guillotine.

    But

    Show up ~30 minutes early, there will likely be metal detectors and a line at them. If you are in line be ready when you get up front, if you need to empty your pockets do that before you are at the detector. This makes it faster for everyone.

    Showing up early will also give you time to find your courtroom in the building. It also will let you watch the court for a few minutes before your time to shine.

    Turn your phone off. Court house rules might require you leave it outside.

    Dress appropriately, a polo should be fine. Any collared shirt tucked in with pants and closed toed shoes will show you put some effort into dressing yourself. No hats unless you’ve got to for your religion.

    It’s the judge’s courtroom don’t interrupt them. Don’t lie. And being on your best behavior starts the moment you step onto the lot not when you enter the room, be polite to court staff as well.

    Read the ticket front and back for specific instructions. Check the court website to see if there’s any announcements that you should be aware of (like local rules).

    Don’t listen to other people’s advice on how you should plead. We don’t know the facts of your case. Most people here aren’t lawyers. Nothing here is legal advice.

    • EddoWagt@feddit.nl
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      We have no clue where you are so we can’t give any good advice. For all we know you live in Elbonia and driving without a license gets you the guillotine.

      Rule no.1 on the internet: If they don’t tell you their country of origin, its the US

      • FireTower@lemmy.world
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        “the US” doesn’t narrow it down much. I kinda assumed that much. What really matters if which one of the 50+ legal systems in the US he is subject to. And which courthouse he is going to.

        This is going to 100% be a state law matter, unless he lives somewhere like D.C. or Puerto Rico which aren’t states but fall under federal jurisdiction.

        • Aeao@lemmy.worldOP
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          It’s Florida. Titusville.

          And the courthouse was closed when I went there today because of the hurricane. Guess they don’t have power yet.

          The clerks office is closed too, and the website hasn’t been updated and still says my court date is today.

          I even tried calling the non-emergancy police number and they don’t know. They told me to call the clerk on Monday. Which will be fine unless my court date is rescheduled for Monday at 9am when they open.

          • deo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            Did you try calling the clerk’s office? They might have an automated message with info about closures due to the hurricane. And generally if they open to the public at 9, the clerks and other staff will be there earlier, so you can try calling at like 8 or something. When I had jury duty, we were told to show up a full two hours before the court actually “opened” so they could do orientation stuff with us.