Indiana does this deferred thing frequently. The State still gets
some money, but most stays in the County. The best is when you are
issued a city citation. speeding must have been on a city street.
this city must have a city court. There the fines are a whole
lot less and the citation or your money, never leaves the city!
It is all about money...
regards, Jim White - greensho@crown.net
(my insurance company thinks that I have not had a speeding ticket
for over 15 years)
At Friday, 23 June 2006, "bjshov8" <bjshov8@comcast.net> wrote:
>Some jurisdictions have "deferred adjudication" (don't know if I
spelled it
>right or no). I'm not a lawyer but the way I understand this is
that the
>court holds the original complaint for a probationary period, and
you pay
>court costs instead of a fine. If you do not get convicted of a
second
>infraction within the probationary period then the court dismisses the
>original complaint. If you get caught a second time, then the court
sticks
>you with both infractions. Of course the court does not have to
share the
>court costs with the state.
>
>> I would bet that if the laws were checked closely, that $75 "Warning"
>> would be illegal. Also I bet that the money never got to the city,
>> probably in someone's pocket.
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