For those that have been charged for following too closely, or have experience with the charge:
What is the/are the lesser charge(s) that the Prosecutor can drop it too?
prosecuter doesnt give a crap about you, or your points, all they want is your money.
The Crown cares about prosecuting the charge. They have no control over the points (neither does the JP) and the court doesn't see the money.
The crown doesnt care about proscuting the charge. If they did, they would never offer a lesser charge.
they just want the Most $$$ for the least amount of hassle.
I was not tailgating anyone. Officer came after the fact. It was a motor vehicle collision. (not on my bike)
It occurred at an uncontrolled intersection on a 2 lane road where cars often slam on their brakes as people block the active lane to wait to make a Left. The reason most people slam on their brakes is because the intersection is right after a blind crest.
Roads were damp, with snow on the shoulders and it was -15 out. The guy infront of the guy I hit slammed on his brakes...guy infront of me slammed on his, I slammed on mine but slid into the back of his vehicle.
After posting this and visiting the scene I have decided to fight it outright. Any advice would be appreciative. I know about getting disclosure and all that but I have never been in an accident before, and I have never gotten a Ticket of this magnitude.
Also, I know minor mistakes on tickets usually mean squat, but I'd regret not asking. The box marker collision involved is not marked as yes. it's blank. Is that of no consequence?
This could be a possible idea but do not quote me on this..
If you can do a waiting game say... go to court, request a trial and request a disclosure (need time to muster up a defense). This MAY give you 6 months from the time of the incident window for your next trial. At this point, it'll be over the time frame for the court to change your charge to careless driving. Now that you're only dealing with a following too closely, hire a paralegal and have that person help you drop the charge or have it change into an expensive parking ticket (if that person can) or an administrative ticket.
GL and keep us updated.
The officer won't appear at trial, it'll just be the OP, the other driver and maybe some independent witnesses. So your questions will be asked to them, not the officer.From Slowbird's posts, I understand that the cop did not see the collision,
but arrived after the event to look after the details and work on his quota.
The following defense seems effective to me:
Q: Did you see me driving?
A: No.
Q: Then can you tell us how closely I was following the vehicle ahead of me?
A: No.
Then address the Magistrate or Justice of the Peace, whoever is in charge.
"As the officer has no evidence to support the charge, I request it be dismissed."
Good luck, however you choose to address this charge.
The officer won't appear at trial, it'll just be the OP, the other driver and maybe some independent witnesses. So your questions will be asked to them, not the officer.
Officer will serve the other driver & witnesses with a summons to appear in court and give evidence for the crown at the OP's trial.
Unless this was investigated by the major collision bureau where their investigative techniques (mapping, photography, etc) are required... there won't be any officers present.
You have to think of the officer as a crown witness; when you previously fought tickets you were probably charged with "speeding"; in that case, the officer has to appear and testify as to how he got your speed and his training. When the officer does not show, there is no one to give evidence to your speeding charge... and in busy jurisdictions (Brampton, Toronto) rather than scheduling another trial date for the officer to show, they withdraw the charge.any time i have fought a ticket, the cop was always there...
what makes you tink a cop wont show up at this trial ? the Officer HAS to show up. or the case is withdrawn, AFAIK
You have to think of the officer as a crown witness; when you previously fought tickets you were probably charged with "speeding"; in that case, the officer has to appear and testify as to how he got your speed and his training. When the officer does not show, there is no one to give evidence to your speeding charge... and in busy jurisdictions (Brampton, Toronto) rather than scheduling another trial date for the officer to show, they withdraw the charge.
In the OP's case, just from Sativa Quemador's questions you can see that the crown does not need the officer. The other driver is the crown witness, not the officer. What evidence will the officer give during the OP's trial? He didn't witness anything, he did not see the OP "Following Too Close". He didn't even see the OP driving. So what will he say at trial?
That's why the officer will not be present at the OP's trial; the crown does not require the officer's testimony to get a conviction from the OP.
Assuming the rear-ender wasn't a dick, The likelihood of the rear-endee (and any witnesses) taking a day of work to try to get a conviction should be pretty low.