http://www.cleveland.com/open/index.ssf ... timat.htmlIn a 5-to-1 ruling, the court said an officer's "unaided visual estimation of a vehicle's speed" is strong enough to support a ticket and conviction. A radar speed detector, commonly used by patrolmen, is not needed, the court concluded.
lol Ohio....
lol Ohio....
It seems that in Ohio, if a cop guesses that you're driving too fast, you're gonna get a ticket.
Re: lol Ohio....
Calibrate the human eye 

[color=#FFBF00]Physicist [/color][color=#FF4000]of[/color] [color=#0000FF]Q3W[/color]
Re: lol Ohio....
I hate asshole drivers and it's pretty obvious when somebody's speeding, they're typically driving like pissed off yellow jackets and putting other people at risk. Besides, he did use a radar gun, it clocked the driver going 82/83mph in a 60mph zone, it was just thrown out cause he couldn't provide a certificate proving he was trained to use a radar gun.
I'm sure pointing the gun at a speeding driver and the reading was just some kind of coincidence.
I'm sure pointing the gun at a speeding driver and the reading was just some kind of coincidence.
-
- Posts: 17020
- Joined: Fri Dec 01, 2000 8:00 am
Re: lol Ohio....
Cops in NC have to be able to correctly guess the speeds of 10/10 cars before they can go on road duty. Not sure if that's adequate for a ticket here, but it's enough for them to pull you over.
Re: lol Ohio....
Yeah, don't think it's that weird tbh. If you spend your day giving speeders tickets for a while, surely you become quite good at estimating.
[size=85][color=#0080BF]io chiamo pinguini![/color][/size]
Re: lol Ohio....
It really isn't any different then a lot of state's rules already. If you read the decision, the problem is that the 5 ruled that the officer alone was enough to convict with nothing else. The 1 against was arguing that this took the right of the decision away from the jury, making the defendant guilty without giving a judge or jury a change to dismiss the testimony.
Re: lol Ohio....
without recording data one cant prove otherwise. meaning that a cop can give you a speedingticket cause he doesnt like your face.Ryoki wrote:Yeah, don't think it's that weird tbh. If you spend your day giving speeders tickets for a while, surely you become quite good at estimating.
i dont think justice works like that sir.
Re: lol Ohio....
you don't live in america man
Re: lol Ohio....
yes, that is what I was insinuating.
Re: lol Ohio....
This.MKJ wrote:without recording data one cant prove otherwise. meaning that a cop can give you a speedingticket cause he doesnt like your face.Ryoki wrote:Yeah, don't think it's that weird tbh. If you spend your day giving speeders tickets for a while, surely you become quite good at estimating.
i dont think justice works like that sir.
So you'd rather give cops carte blanche in exchange for this one asshole getting a ticket?morguen87 wrote:I hate asshole drivers and it's pretty obvious when somebody's speeding, they're typically driving like pissed off yellow jackets and putting other people at risk. Besides, he did use a radar gun, it clocked the driver going 82/83mph in a 60mph zone, it was just thrown out cause he couldn't provide a certificate proving he was trained to use a radar gun.
I'm sure pointing the gun at a speeding driver and the reading was just some kind of coincidence.
In my world, this asshole gets a free pass, the cop learns to get his shit together, and we don't set a precedent to cover the asses of cops who fuck up in the future.
Re: lol Ohio....
in regards to speeding, in court a cop is an expert witness and provides expert testimony.
Re: lol Ohio....
I never understood why this would be. When the case is Police vs You, then how in the hell can a representative of the police (in fact, the one that fined you in the first place) be a neutral eyewitness?morguen87 wrote:in regards to speeding, in court a cop is an expert witness and provides expert testimony.
I'm with MKJ and l0g1c on this one. It's just a cheap way to cover the ass of policemen that got a bad day.
Re: lol Ohio....
Because they're a cop...how do you think the legal system works? All they need is the cop in the chair.Eraser wrote:I never understood why this would be. When the case is Police vs You, then how in the hell can a representative of the police (in fact, the one that fined you in the first place) be a neutral eyewitness?morguen87 wrote:in regards to speeding, in court a cop is an expert witness and provides expert testimony.
I'm with MKJ and l0g1c on this one. It's just a cheap way to cover the ass of policemen that got a bad day.
What kind of proof do you need? He can always say he paced you. Maybe you'll ask to see the radar gun? Doesn't matter, it's a myth. All the cop has to do in court is prove he's trained to use it, that it was calibrated recently and his testimony that he clocked you at XX speed.
This is nothing new. Once again, the problem is outlined in the dissenting opinion:
(clipped the quote for readings sake)
http://www.sconet.state.oh.us/rod/docs/ ... o-2420.pdfO’DONNELL, J., dissenting.
I respectfully dissent.
While a police officer who is trained, certified by the Ohio Peace Officer Training Academy, and experienced in estimating a vehicle’s speed may, as any other expert witness, offer an opinion of the speed of a moving vehicle during testimony in a court proceeding, I do not agree that such testimony per se is sufficient evidence to support a conviction for speeding. Like any other witness, a police officer’s credibility is to be determined by the jury or other factfinder. (‘[T]he weight to be given the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses are primarily for the trier of the facts’”). In fact, jury instructions given regularly by trial judges advise that a jury is privileged to believe all, part, or none of the testimony of any witness. See, e.g., State v. Group, (citing jury instruction stating that jurors may believe or disbelieve all or any of the testimony of any witness). Thus, I would assert that a broad standard as postulated majority that a trained, certified, and experienced officer’s estimate of speed sufficient evidence to support a conviction for speeding eclipses the role fact-finder to reject such testimony and thus such testimony, if found not credible, could, in some instances, be insufficient to support a conviction.