The Shoulder
The Shoulder
58
clever-dove-505

Cop issued my wife a speeding ticket with zero evidence she was speeding — can they just do that?

I'm still kind of in shock about how this whole thing played out and hoping someone here has been through something similar.

Last week my wife was driving on a rural back road — one of those narrow two-lane roads with no shoulder markings — when she hit a patch of loose gravel near the edge, overcorrected slightly, and slid into a shallow drainage ditch on the right side. She wasn't hurt, the car had some scrapes but was technically still drivable, and she immediately called me and our roadside assistance.

When two officers arrived, things got weird fast. One pulled her aside for what turned out to be a full field sobriety check (she passed, obviously — it was 2pm on a Tuesday). Meanwhile the other officer, without saying much to her, had already called for a tow. My wife told them our roadside assistance was literally en route, maybe 20 minutes out, and we live less than 5 minutes from the spot. Didn't matter — they towed it anyway.

Now here's the part I really don't understand: she got cited for speeding. She told them she was going the posted limit, maybe even under it because the road was unfamiliar. She never admitted to speeding. The officers weren't there when it happened. There are no traffic cameras on that road. No skid marks worth measuring. So what exactly are they basing this on??

We're now looking at an impound bill plus the ticket fine, and honestly we just don't have that sitting around right now. I'm not trying to dodge responsibility if she did something wrong, but it really feels like something's off here.

Has anyone successfully fought a ticket like this? Is there any way to contest the impound fees? Any advice appreciated — we're kind of at a loss.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 23
    spry-vole-545

    For a speeding citation to hold up, there generally needs to be some basis for the officer's determination — radar, laser, pacing, or at minimum a documented observation. 'She went off the road so she must have been speeding' isn't really a legal standard. When you request the officer's notes through discovery (which you can do if you contest the ticket), look at what they actually wrote down as the basis for the citation. That document is really telling. Also, impound authority varies by jurisdiction but officers usually have discretion — the problem is that discretion cuts both ways and it's hard to undo after the fact.

  • 19
    calm-mole-990

    Step one: do NOT pay that ticket yet. Paying it is an admission. Contest it. Show up to court, bring photos of the road conditions, note the lack of any speed-measurement equipment in the area. Make the officer explain exactly how they determined her speed. Most of the time they can't, and judges know that.

    • 10
      tired-commuter221

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 19
    plain-crane-124

    Also watch out — if your insurance company gets wind of a speeding ticket connected to this, don't be surprised if an adjuster tries to use it to reduce or complicate your claim. They love any hook that suggests driver fault. Fight the ticket AND be careful what you say to your insurer in the meantime. Stick to the facts, don't speculate about speed.

    • 6
      calm-parent463

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 19
    genuine-swift-494

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this on top of the stress of the accident itself. Your wife must have been shaken up enough already without getting interrogated and ticketed on top of it. I hope you're both doing okay emotionally — that kind of thing really messes with you.

  • 19
    warm-kestrel-937

    Make sure your wife gets checked out by a doctor if she hasn't already, even if she feels fine. Adrenaline after an accident can mask soreness and whiplash symptoms that show up 24–72 hours later. Getting that documented early matters a lot if anything comes up down the road.

  • 18
    clever-wolf-027

    This happened to something almost exactly like this happened to my brother. Single-car slide-off on a gravel road, no witnesses, and somehow he still got a speeding citation. He went to court, pled not guilty, and the officer basically had nothing to back it up with. Ticket got dismissed. It's absolutely worth fighting — don't just pay it and accept it.

  • 17
    careful-seal-013

    Not legal advice, but this is genuinely worth a free consult with a traffic or personal injury attorney. An officer issuing a speeding citation without any objective speed measurement and no witnesses is the kind of thing that often doesn't survive a courtroom challenge. The impound side is trickier — officers typically have broad tow authority — but some jurisdictions do require them to consider alternatives like a licensed driver picking up the vehicle. An attorney can tell you quickly if either of these is worth pursuing where you are.

  • 10
    plain-bison-813

    I don't doubt your account, but a couple of questions: did the officer say anything specific about WHY they thought she was speeding — like did they mention the distance the car traveled, tire marks, anything like that? And was there a posted speed limit on that road or was it unposted? Those details could matter a lot for how contestable the ticket actually is.

  • 9
    patient-tern-647

    Just a heads-up from my old job: if your wife's insurer sees a speeding citation on her record tied to this incident, it could affect how they handle the claim and potentially her future premiums — even if the citation feels totally unjust. I'd really push to get that ticket contested and ideally dismissed before it hits her driving record. Once it's there it's a pain to remove.