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Old 07-16-2006, 11:28 PM   #7
coloradosilver
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Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Rocky Mountains, Colorado
Posts: 995
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Originally Posted by graywolf624
Where I'm from, driving on private property isn't a driving offence. I don't think it's a criminal offence either, so I'll hazard a guess at no.
I dont think you understand. He commited a driving offense on private property.

The answer is it depends. If the owner of the land gave the police the go ahead to ticket then yes. If he didn't then the police have no jurisdiction to ticket.
Um..no. Thats about as wrong as it gets.

The answer is yes! Just beause you were on private property doesn't excuse you from certain things. Stop signs, no citation. Speed limits, no citation. Driving that could be considered dangerous, careless, or reckless is not excused. Its a safety thing.

The trick is this.... If the officer can articulate that you were driving in a careless or reckless maner, then he has full power to give you that citation. My guess is that the ticket was cited as being careless driving.

The owner of the property doesn't come into play unless hw is the one that called the police and wants to press charges for some damage you caused to his property.

An officer cannot write a ticket for a traffic ofence that he did not witness because he needs probable cause to give the ticket in the first place. A witness to bad driving does not constitute probable cause.

Oh to answer your question.... If the ticket came from the city, county, or campus police, then yes it will go on your perminate record.
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