Red light camera
#11
#12
Sort of true, that was the thinking for a long long time. I believe they get around it by saying the person that sits in the van is the “in person”. There were too many people that would take the time to ask for an appearance in front of a judge, so they found a work around to get your money. Talk to your lawyer about it.
IIRC, the guy in the van or the person reviewing the ticket before making is the signature at the bottom that counts as the “server”.
If you don’t pay, then they hand it over to collections.
Then you get to deal with those people.
About the only “easy” way out is if the picture of you is fuzzy or your DL pic has little resemblence to you now, etc.
IIRC, the guy in the van or the person reviewing the ticket before making is the signature at the bottom that counts as the “server”.
If you don’t pay, then they hand it over to collections.
Then you get to deal with those people.
About the only “easy” way out is if the picture of you is fuzzy or your DL pic has little resemblence to you now, etc.
None of this helps the OP though.
#13
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Jul 2013
Posts: 4,670
Like I mentioned, him or the person that has to review it before being mailed. Ask your lawyer
My advice is to ask your lawyer.
And that’s true, mail can get lost. Till they step up their game. They’ll send via certified mail. Contray to what you’ve heard/read, people HAVE BEEN SERVED. How the hell they had the resources for that is beyond me, but they have.
Well, sort of. They’re still going to make sure they get their money. Ask your lawyer.
You don’t have to, Ive had a few of them. As well as a few lawyers.
But just telling people to ignore/throw them away isnt really the best advice.
Agreed. I should have prefaced that in my post before the thread veered/went tangential.
My understanding (and I’ll admit, I was listening to talk radio) was that it must be delivered in person to you, not mailed. Which makes sense, mail can get lost. I’ve never gotten one, so my advice is call the county clerk and ask.
And that’s true, mail can get lost. Till they step up their game. They’ll send via certified mail. Contray to what you’ve heard/read, people HAVE BEEN SERVED. How the hell they had the resources for that is beyond me, but they have.
Several callers did this and were told it’s not enforceable. And yes, it was mentioned that you can claim it wasn’t you driving as well.
You don’t have to, Ive had a few of them. As well as a few lawyers.
But just telling people to ignore/throw them away isnt really the best advice.
None of this helps the OP though.
Last edited by John Carr; 12-17-2018 at 10:45 AM.
#14
Line Holder
Joined APC: Jan 2019
Posts: 30
I’ve read this whole thread and it still isn’t clear to me how to handle this. I got a red light camera ticket about 10 years ago in Denver. Of course, back then I was young and the thought of fighting it or getting a lawyer never even occurred to me since it didn’t seem like a big deal at all (and still doesn’t seem that way to me). Should this be handled like a parking ticket and not listed anywhere on the app? Or should I just list it on the app. The risk to listing it is obviously a slightly lower app score or them looking upon your app slightly less. I could also just bring it up during the interview when they give the opportunity to talk about anything else that may be pertinent. Any advice here would be appreciated.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post