Friday, January 16, 2009

Elko man's $62 speeding ticket battle could cost residents

The legal principle is sound. The enforcers of the law MUST follow the law. If the signage does not follow the law then there is NO sign. However, Killian is a wuse for saying he is sorry. Boo Fraking Hoo!

ELKO, Nev. (AP) — A Spring Creek man who beat a $62 ticket has created a legal speed trap that could cost Elko County and his neighbors much more.

James Killian, a civil engineer with the Nevada Department of Transportation, argued the ticket he received in April for going 39 mph in a 25 mph zone was unenforceable because the speed limit sign was too small and didn’t comply with uniform traffic codes adopted by the state in 2003.

Elko Justice of the Peace Al Kacin agreed, and dismissed the citation.

Now county and Spring Creek Association employees are taking inventory of traffic signs, trying to determine how many may need to be replaced if the local jurisdictions are required to comply with the updated standards.

Killian said he wouldn’t have raised the issue if he had known the unintended consequences of the judge’s ruling.