Speeding Excuses That Work


Book Description




I Had to Drive I Was Too Drunk to Walk


Book Description

I had to drive, I was too drunk to walk is a compilation of 101 of the funniest, most bizarre excuses given to our nations police officers by the notorious violator. These excuses are true and documented in the records of numerous police, sheriff and state patrol entities. The author collected these unique excuses over a period of 11 years. Some came from personal experiences as an officer and some were passed on by colleagues from across the country. This book is not only entertaining, but it is also an educational journey for the reader as the author has rated the violators excuses. The risk ratings include Low, Moderate, High and Step out of the Car. The risk rating pertains to the probability of arrest or citation a person earns by using the related excuse. An excuse followed by a Step out of the Car rating usually guarantees the driver a trip to the slammer (probably not a good excuse to use). Some of these excuses actually worked and the author wants you to know why. Its amazing how the stress of being under blue lights, badges, and lots of leather affects us humans. This is your chance to take a quick peek into the mind of a traffic cop. How does that mind work? How do the police decide when to write a ticket? What makes up the best chances to get out of a ticket? These questions and more are answered in I had to drive, I was too drunk to walk!




The Little Giant Encyclopedia of Outrageous Excuses


Book Description

Every time you mess up, you feel the need to make an excuse. If you're tired of offering the same old tired explanations, take your pick from this encyclopedic collection of hundreds of excuses you've never used before. They're organized into categories like medical emergencies ("I have a chemical imbalance"), weather ("the humidity swelled my door shut"), ancient proverbs ("nothing is inevitable until it happens"), and reasons that make no sense ("I did my own thing and now I have to undo it"). You can even pick the perfect excuse for particular people: boss, spouse, date, or cop. Serious excuse makers will appreciate the psychological interpretations of various responses, to make sure you pick the right one for every situation.







The Fast and The Furious: Drivers, Speed Cameras and Control in a Risk Society


Book Description

The Fast and The Furious: Drivers, Speed Cameras and Control in a Risk Society presents a sociological and criminological perspective critical to understanding the driver's role at the centre of road safety interventions. Such an approach is, it is argued, as crucial to an understanding of attempts to reduce road crashes, deaths and injuries as approaching such questions from an engineering or educational perspective. The book offers an explanation for the continued debate about one road safety intervention - the speed camera - by situating that debate within contemporary literature about the 'risk society' (Beck, 1992) and more broadly understood experiences of risk faced on a daily basis by drivers. Rather than a focus on risk as something that can be objectively assessed, measured and managed separately from the social context in which it is encountered, it suggests that 'risk' is something that permeates this particular debate from every angle. The book achieves its aims by utilising sociological and criminological perspectives to investigate issues such as: - the social context in which it is possible for drivers to reject official scientific expertise about crash causation and camera effectiveness - the self-defined 'respectability' of the population being problematised and its juxtaposition with a 'proper' police focus on 'real criminals' - the reconceptualisation of law-breaking as risk-taking rather than inherently 'wrong' behaviour and its consequences for the enforcement of laws based on risk assessment - the experience of being controlled by technology and of receiving what is essentially 'automated justice'. These and other issues are explored and suggested as illuminating of both the real concerns underpinning this debate and potentially instructive for future attempts to control risky behaviour both within and beyond a road safety context.




Shite Excuses


Book Description

This little book offers a collection of the strangest and weirdest excuses ever given to employers, spouses, dentists, doctors, teachers - in fact, anybody. Don't just use any old excuse - dare to have fun and be different! Excuses are grouped by category: work, church, dating, traffic, etc.




A Speeder's Guide to Avoiding Tickets


Book Description

Regardless of your record as a driver, everyone speeds sometimes. You are on the open road, no one around for miles, and so you step on the gas pedal. Then you experience a sinking feeling in the pit of your stomach -- and in your wallet -- when you see a flashing red light in the rearview mirror. Now you can ease on down the road without paying the high price of traffic tickets, inflated insurance premiums and expensive lawyer's fees. Former New York State Trooper James M. Eagan tells you how-with invaluable tips and trade secrets that the police don't want you to know. What makes a cop "tick" -- and how to use it to your advantage What dates and times are safest to step on the gas and when you are most likely to get caught How to avoid talking yourself into tickets What stories and excuses will often work How to spot an unmarked car Clipping the wings off "The Bear in the Air" And much more! Whether you drive for business or pleasure -- or simply suffer from occasional leadfoot -- you cannot afford to be without this book!




An Educated Guide to Speeding Tickets


Book Description

A police officer for 14 years in the state of Connecticut, author Richard Wallace II is on expert on the subject of speeding tickets, and the various speed detection devices being currently used by members of law enforcement today. He has been directly involved in the stopping of motarists on speeding related charges, and has issued many citations for said violations over his 14 year career in law enforcement. Who better to know the ins and outs about speeding and how speed is detected, but a police officer! By using this information, one can expect to save hundreds of dollars in fines and insurance charges, as well as keeping ones operator's license. The small price paid for this book will be saved over and over!




Beat the Cops


Book Description

Tells how to avoid and contest moving violations, discusses speed limits, radar, and drunk driving, and describes traffic court procedures.




Aww Hell Naw Let Me Explain!


Book Description

In this Book you will find the top 100 excuses that many Traffic Control Agents/officers can say that they’ve heard from citizens worldwide. This is sort of a humorous book that will have you saying "yeah I said that one before" or "yeah I've heard that excuse a million in one times."