Officer's Narrative Style In Disclosure
Well, I had my day in court. Charged with a red light offence 144/18 ($325.00 + 3 points). Plead guilty to ignoring lane light 144/10, which I don't really understand ($115.00, no points). I think I made the right choice.
Prior to this... Get ticket, choose to go to trial and filed for disclosure etc.
Disclosure reads: "amber light 1 m/v enters intersection", "light turns red m/v drives through intersection", farther down in the officer's notes it reads: "had 10 to 15' to stop before line indicating beginning of intersection"
Sounded right to me, light went from green to amber just as we entered the intersection (we were closer than 10 or 15 feet but the cop was 200' away so his estimate was fairly subjective). My dispute was that we had cleared the intersection before it turned red.
> Intersection is 183 feet long, light is amber for 5 seconds, I'm travelling at 50 km/h - ergo I travelled 227.5 feet in five seconds.
> 183 + 15 (distance we were outside of intersection) = 198 feet
> 227.5 - 198 = 29.5, I had almost 30 feet to spare.
Day of trial, everyone talks to the prosecutor before trial. O.K. Guess what! The prosecutor tells me the officer was describing two separate vehicles! One went through on amber and I went through on red! WTF?! Unless he's taking a creative writing course in his spare time, what's this all about?
Prosecutor asked if I was following anyone? No. There were other vehicles going through the intersection but the closest was probably 90 feet away. Why the narrative about another vehicle?
I wanna go to trial. Prosecutor essentially acknowledges he knows the cop isn't honest. But tells me unless I can prove the cop isn't being honest it's going to be a tough road. Shaken by the revelations I thank him, think about it then return just before trial and take his offer.
From time to time I see the cop flitting around, in and out of the court room etc.
Here's the kicker. My turn in front of the justice. I look around - no cop. Well, offer's made and accepted maybe he doesn't have to hang around. Just out of curiosity I quietly ask the prosecutor, "Where's the cop?" His reply, "Oh, he "was" here." Go through the formalities, trial's over and immediately leave. 5 minutes later and a couple of miles away I swear I pass him driving his patrol car. Did I get talked into a plea because the cop had places to go?
I know, even if you have a good defense, it's still a big roll of the dice. Ultimately, I think I did O.K.
The narrative in disclosure about the second car(?) still bugs me, so does his absence at the trial.
Anybody have any thoughts?