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How to Avoid a Speeding Ticket
Ticket Avoidance Tips
10 Ways to Avoid Speeding Tickets
People who get speeding tickets are often guilty of more than just
driving faster than the speed limit. Their main offense? Getting noticed
in the first place. That's the first domino to fall in the ugly chain of
events that leads to a ticket.
Here are some common sense ways to run under the radar -- literally:
· Drive within 5-10 mph of surrounding traffic. Police officers are
usually looking for drivers that are going noticeably faster than the
other cars on the road. If you're within a pack of cars all going 5 to
10 mph over the limit, you've automatically improved your odds of not
being the one that gets pulled over, even though you're all technically
speeding. The police officer has to pick one car; if you go with the
flow of traffic, it probably won't be you. And it definitely won't be
you if you don't speed in the first place.
· Try to stay in the middle of the pack. If you're the lead car, logic
says you'll be the first car to run past any radar trap up ahead. And if
you're the last car, you'll be the one the police officer rolls up
behind. That means the safest place is in the middle -- just like a
gazelle fleeing a hungry lion by seeking safety in the middle of the
herd.
· Find a "rabbit." If you can't find a pack of cars going the speed
you'd like to maintain, the next best thing is to find yourself a rabbit
-- a solitary driver traveling the speed you'd like to drive that you
can follow discretely, about 50-100 yards back. If there's a police
officer using radar, hopefully the rabbit will trip the trap, not you.
And if he brakes suddenly, you have just received your early warning in
time to take defensive action.
· Do not change lanes frequently, tailgate or otherwise drive
aggressively. In addition to being rude and dangerous, you're just
asking for a trucker or someone with a cell phone to call the police and
give them a description of your vehicle and license plate number. Always
use your signals and be courteous to fellow drivers. It's safer, and it
will help you fade into background.
· Avoid the fast lane. Use the far left lane to pass when necessary, but
try to stay in the middle lanes when possible. Reason? If a police
officer is lurking in a cut-out along the median strip (or coming at you
from the opposite direction on a divided highway) the speeder in the far
left lane is the one most likely to become the target. Drivers who get
nailed are often the type who rack it up to 10 or 15 over the limit and
remain in the far left lane.
· Watch for cut-outs and modulate your speed accordingly. On many
highways, there are cut-outs in the median strip every couple of miles.
Usually, you can see these in plenty of time to slow down a little bit
in case there's a police officer lurking behind the bushes.
· Don't speed when you are the only car on the road. If you ignore this
warning, it's the equivalent of plastering a "ticket me!" bumper sticker
on your vehicle. Even if you're only doing 5 mph over the posted limit,
if there's a police officer using radar, he's got nothing to look at but
you. Lonesome speeding is even more dangerous in small towns, where
radar traps and aggressive enforcement can be common. And never speed
late at night. Drunk-driving patrols are heavy and police officers are
more inclined to pull you over for any offense in order to check you for
signs of alcohol. Don't give them a reason.
· If it's ok legally, get a radar detector. Yes, they're expensive (good
ones, anyhow). But a one-time hit of, say, $300 for a decent radar
detector is cheaper than even a single big seeding ticket and the higher
insurance costs that will come with it. Radar detectors are legal in
most states and well worth the investment.
· If possible, drive a nondescript vehicle. It may not be fair, but it's
human nature to notice things that stand out from the crowd.
Bright-colored cars, those with loud exhaust or other pimped out
enhancements are the cars more likely to draw a police officer's initial
attention than ordinary-looking, family-type cars. Since the police
officer has to single out one car, which car do you suppose is the
likely candidate? The bright yellow Mustang GT with 20-inch chrome rims?
Or the silver Taurus?
If you do get pulled over while driving a fancy, high-profile car, your
odds of getting a ticket versus a warning have probably gone up. If
you're driving a fast-looking hot rod, the police officer is going to
assume you use it and deserve a ticket more than the guy in a
family-looking ride whose plea that he "didn't realize he was speeding,
officer" comes off as more believable.
· Be aware that appearances count. That is, your appearance. If your
appearance says, "Responsible member of the community," you're apt to
get a more friendly response than if you look and act like trouble.
The worst possible thing you can do is combine all the no-no's listed
above by driving a flashy car too fast, late at night when you're the
only car on the road while looking like you just robbed a bank.
If you do that, expect a ticket. And expect no mercy.
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