by Earl » Thu May 15, 2014 9:24 am
Los Angeles, CA. I was issued a speeding ticket(going 50 in 35mph, was a speed trap). When officer issued ticket, I asked if he could tell me the $ amount of fine. He told me he couldn't answer me and that I should wait for the ticket which would be mailed to me. When filling out the citation, he wrote my old address from my driver's license even though I told him that was an outdated address(he also misspelled the street name). I gave him my new address which he wrote in the registered owner's address part of the citation. The ticket never came and in the meantime I'd misplaced the original citation thinking I didn't need it since the ticket would be mailed to me. Months later, I found the citation and remembered that I'd never received the ticket. I checked on Superior Court's website and was shocked to find that my ticket had been turned over to collections and amounted to over $700! These fines had accrued since I hadn't paid the ticket by the court date. I didn't think this was fair since the officer had told me to wait for the ticket in the mail and it never came and was never forwarded to me because 1) he'd written my old address and 2) he misspelled the street name. I never found out what the original amount of the ticket was. There was no way to appeal the fine once it had been turned over to collections. Noone answers the phone number that's listed on the citation. So I paid the fine and was told by the Collections person that I should write a letter of complaint to the Superior Court. Can you advise me on who I should be sending the complaint letter to? There are a number of Superior Court judges so I don't know who to address it to. Do you have any suggestions of who I might cc: the letter to. Do you think the ACLU could help? Do I have any chance of getting some of my $ back? I was ready to pay the original amount of the ticket which I figure was probably around $200? and wanted to go to traffic school. But it's outrageous to me to have to pay $700 and being sent to collections with no warning