How to Begin Getting a Red Light Camera Ticket Dismissed

As submitted to photoenforced.com 

 The first step to fighting any traffic infraction is to look up the vehicle code section you were cited with. The second step is to pick apart that vehicle code section in order to find out what the elements of the infraction are. If any of the elements necessary to be present in order to find someone guilty of the infraction are missing in your situation then you’re well on your way to getting your ticket dismissed.

 

Now a red light camera ticket will have the violation code listed as California Vehicle Code (CVC) section 21453. You can go online to www.legalinfo.ca.gov to look it up. However there is more involved to fighting a red light camera ticket.

 

You not only need to look up that code section which you were actually cited for, but you also need to look up a few additional code sectionslike what vehicle code section authorizes red light camera enforcement. Once you know what sections actually lay out the rules or requirements for the operation of red light cameras, you can write down those and then check to see if any of the rules were violated or requirements not followed in your case. Check out CVC§21453, CVC§ 21455.5, CVC§21455.6, CVC§ 21455.7, CVC§40518, if any rules listed in these code sections were violated, or requirements not followed, then you have ammunition for getting the ticket dismissed. – blog submitted by staging-vadusuxe.kinsta.cloud, helping drivers contest and dismiss their traffic tickets. 

 

If you get cited for a red light photo ticket, contact us at www.staging-vadusuxe.kinsta.cloud or call us at (800) 850-8038.  For Spanish, please visit www.Combatesuticket.com or call (818) 584-3689.  For more information on how TicketBust can help to beat your cell phone ticket, visit www.fightcellphonetickets.com or call (800) 850-8038. 

 

Short Red Time (Late Time) on Your Red Light Camera Ticket?

blog submitted to photoenforced.com by staging-vadusuxe.kinsta.cloud, helping drivers contest and dismiss their traffic tickets.   

If you find yourself thinking you have no defense to a red light photo ticket, don’t give up yet! You can still try to argue you could not have stopped safely within such a short time and short distance from the limit line and slamming on the brakes would have posed a greater danger to yourself and others then continuing through.

 

Look on your ticket for the late time (for example on a Red Flex ticket this will be displayed on the black bar across the top of the photos displayed vertically on the right hand side). If the red light camera ticket you received has a very short late time for example, one tenth of a second (0.1), wouldn’t it have been very difficult to stop behind the limit line for the light when it changed? Even more so if it was raining. Perhaps slamming on the brakes would have resulted in you skidding into the middle of the intersection where you would have blocked traffic.

 

If your ticket does not show a late time then you can usually judge how long the light had been red by the position of other vehicles around you. If there were other vehicles turning left at the same time as you or going straight through and cross traffic hasn’t moved past their limit line, then it’s likely the light wasn’t red for long at all.  Of course if you were turning right, it’s more likely than not that the light was already red and that you rolled through, so it’s chancy if you don’t have the red time.

The majority of tickets do show the red time and you stand a better chance if the red time is below five-tenths of a second (0.5) because although the law does not mandate them to do so, some local governments employ grace periods of up to before their red light cameras will begin taking photographs. Grace periods such as these are employed because it is understood that the shorter the red time the less likely the driver could have stopped in time. You stand an even better chance if that red time is three-tenths of a second (0.3) or below because as previously indicated by the Federal Highway Administration, a grace period of three-tenths of a second is commonly used and five-tenths of a second is the international standard. –  blog submitted by staging-vadusuxe.kinsta.cloud, helping drivers contest and dismiss their traffic tickets. 

If you get cited for a red light photo ticket, contact us at www.staging-vadusuxe.kinsta.cloud or call us at (800) 850-8038.  For Spanish, please visit www.Combatesuticket.com or call (818) 584-3689.  For more information on how TicketBust can help to beat your cell phone ticket, visit www.fightcellphonetickets.com or call (800) 850-8038. 

 

Ticketbust Saves this Client by Getting His Red Light Photo Ticket Dismissed

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d5czi0bK-BQ

Mom Gets Daughter’s Red Light Ticket Dismissed Using staging-vadusuxe.kinsta.cloud

Karla D writes, “My daughter, Maxcy, got a red light ticket , even though the light had not appeared to change colors from one picture to the next.  I thought we’d give the Ticket Busters a try..I sure did not want to go thru the courtroom experience if I didn’t have to.  When it got dismissed I couldn’t have been more surprised that it actually worked!   I am still pinching myself…is this a dream? All for only 250.00.  Her ticket was almost 500.00 not to mention whatever her insurance would of gone up to.  If it hadn’t of worked I would of just had to pay Ticket Busters 150.00 for filing.  Sure I could of done it myself..but done it right?  I think not.  Oh yes, I contacted a lawyer who quoted me 800.00.  So, I think this is a pretty good deal!  I am recommending them to my friends.  Good luck with your ticket. A pleased Agoura Hills mom,  Karla D.”