On Aug 8, 11:44=A0am, te...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
> Thanks catalpa for reading thoroughtly and understand exactly what I'm
> saying. Just a few clarifying points:
> 1) My driver license is currently "valid" and 0 points - meaning no
> ticket/no accident. The problem is the entries regarding the whole
> incident.
> 2) Insurance system is computerized and determines "good driver
> discount" base on the # entries in the driving record - independent of
> points. That's the main problem. No one's reading the driving record
> manually to determine good driver discount. So other insurance
> companies would probably do the same.
> 3) I have the copy of the police request to the court to dismiss the
> ticket stating it was erronous. They also said the wrong driver
> license problem has also occurred in neighboring cities and that they
> have personnel meeting with DMV officials to find a remedy.
> 4) Everything is computer based these days. So the court doesn't
> actually sending any letters out. Some court clerk just sits in front
> of the computer playing with the clicking and get my driver license
> unsuspended electronically.
That's impossible. Since the people who actually understand
science, logic, and english,
were also the people who invented Digital, Artifical Intelligence,
Holograms,
Lasers, Masers, Fiber Optics, Solar Energy, Wind Energy, PV Cells,
Cell Phones, HDTV,
Satellites, GPS, CD, DVD+rw, WWW, Robots, and Cruise Missiles. For
the simple reason, as we've
been telling the DMV idiots for at least 100 years now, It's
impossible to do
ANYTHING electronically.
>
> "Many states have rules requiring valid personal service
> before any photo-radar/light ticket to be valid. Mail
> doesn't cut it. Furthermore many states do NOT count
> photo-radar/light tickets against the Driver License
> *even if* the defendant is found guilty or pleads guilty.
> "
> =A0--- NOT calinfornia -- the ticket was mailed out normally. If the
> court doesn't hear from you they order DMV to suspend and issue a
> warrant of some sort. The ticketing process was fully automated.


|