
Originally Posted by
OzCop
All the above being said, I really hate the court system in Texas in regards to traffic offenses, especially local JPs and police judges... I've stated this in the past as I recall, but Texas law becons some departments to set up speed traps. These so-called speed traps are not for the sake of safety, rather they are revenue enhancement tools. Some states, such as KY, did away with police judges and local courts years ago, opting for a district court system. Under the Texas system, the jurisdiction issuing the citation receives 100% of the revenue generated through traffic enforcement, generally going to the general fund. This encourages speed traps and citations for other minor infractions rather than a warning. Some officers even have contests to see who can write the most in a given month. Of course, supervisors encourage such action because it brings in revenue, and they receive praise for generating the income.
Under the District Court system, all fine monies levied are sent to the state, and re-distributed throughout the state to operate the court systems. The issuing jurisdiction gets an amount commensurate with the size and activity of their respective judicial activity...The larger the jurisdictiion, the larger the courts system as a general rule, so the podunk revenue generators don't really get squat, depending on the size of the county and it's activities.
Safe driving is always encouraged, but as a cop for 27 years, I found that speed is not usually the only factor when it comes to unsafe driving. Speed is only one element. Most citations I issued during my career were more of a reckless driving variety where speeding was only one element of the charge. Of course, the severity of the speed infraction played a part in that also. My tolerance levels were actually pretty high, geographically dependant. On the interstate and other open highways with limited access, you had to be running in excess of 15 mph OVER the posted limit. Even that was not written in stone and was highly dependant on other circumstances, like traffic congestion, vehicle condition (subjective), highway and weather conditions, etc. Tolerance levels were a bit lower in residential areas, depending on density of the area, traffic, presence of children and other pedestrians, road width, sidewalks or not, etc. Sorry for the diatrible....