just the officers interpretation...what is your take from the laws i provided?
I think you've discovered for yourself one of the
fundamentals of the legal system: It's
all in the interpretation.
I've successfully had every ticket I've ever received on motorcycles over the past couple of decades either thrown out, or at least had the penalties greatly reduced, by fighting them. I'm no legal expert but I have learned that, in spite of what us lay-people tend to believe, the law is
not necessarily always the law.
Some other observations from my experience which might help you out:
- Judges, law enforcement & law-makers are distinct entities, each with their own biases, & they do not necessarily all agree with one-another. You can exploit the mis-alignments between them.
- Pick your defense (you can see from all the above suggestions that you have many to choose from) & stick with it. Focus every word that comes out of your mouth on supporting your defense.
- As lunatic pointed out above, use logical arguments which relate back to laws & process. I've not often seen emotion work well in traffic court.
- Use pictures to support your defense. As they say, a picture's worth a thousand words so if there is something about the scene that's relevant to your defense (unclear markings, signage, a crest in the road, whatever), go back & take a picture to present to the Judge. Just be prepared to surrender it as evidence.
- Dress for the occasion & use court-room etiquette. Little things like wearing a tie & addressing the Judge as "Your Honour" show the court (including the LEO who cited you) that you know what you're doing, you're serious about being there & in defending yourself.
Successfully fighting a ticket yourself is rewarding & a great educational experience; I applaud you for deciding to give it a try!