toybus wrote:it just seems that the prosecutor puts off anyone who is pleaing not guilty. we are always put at the end and ive had to wait for hours while they deal with everyone else.
It may seem unfair, but this is standard procedure, as hwybear says.
Guilty pleas are handled expeditiously because the matter is essentially "closed" and it is a formality. It also encourages both parties to reach an agreement. In the same vein, at trials I've been present at, the Crown also announces which charges are being withdrawn at the outset, so in my view it works both ways.
The way I see it, putting off trials to the end makes the most sense. They take up the most time, and if someone has come in to plea-bargain or have their charges withdrawn, if the trial ran all the way through the docket block time, they'd have to come back another day. In some cases, a charge that was going to be withdrawn because the officer failed to appear may result in a conviction at a later date because, at the re-scheduled date, the officer DID appear.
The officer's discretion to reduce a ticket at the roadside is an encouragement to pay it. In my case, when an officer reduces a ticket at the roadside, I shut up and pay. If not, I don't argue, I don't protest, I just wish them a nice day and file a Notice to Appear a few days later. As hwybear said, as well, the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled that, at trial, the speed may be raised to the actual speed noted by the officer during the traffic stop. I don't particularly find it unfair. In fact, although I'm more "pro-defendant," I'd say that I get a bit irked when I find out that an officer dropped a ticket from some excruciatingly high speed and the defendant fought it anyway. I saw someone in court for a ticket for 25 over. Turns out, Odot stopped him for actually going 148 in an 80, reduced it, let him drive home... and he turns around and fights it. Fighting tickets that are substantially reduced only encourages the officer to hammer the snot out of drivers at the roadside with a plethora of tickets every time. If every ticket is going to be fought, no matter what, why reduce? This is particularly important to consider for drivers who may be hovering around, say, 51 over the limit.
That's my perspective on it.