Interesting Article About Court Appearances. Opinions?
Court work pays off in massive overtimePAWEL DWULIT/TORONTO STAR
At almost $162,000, Michael Thompson is among Toronto's highest-paid police officers thanks, in part, to the overtime he logs appearing in traffic court.
City nets $8 million from fines while traffic cops get $6 million in extra pay
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Officials are looking at many ways to replace an officer's in-person testimony, including replacing his or her live statements with a certified document.
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Making those changes would involve rewriting law, says Toronto Police Association head Dave Wilson, which is not a domain of the police. However, he says, the ticket is already a certified statement, so there is no need for another. And, if someone wants to contest the facts in court, the officer must be present to defend his decision.
Trying to replace an officer's live testimony with a pre-written statement, "doesn't make any sense at all," Wilson says. "It goes against the whole legal system."
I'd also like to hear everyone's opinions on the other aspects of the article. What grabbed me is that I'm happy that one public police figure (Dave Wilson) respects the law, unlike Cam and Julian.