Options for Dealing with a Speeding Ticket in Ohio

By Eric Abrego, published Jan 02, 2008
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Receiving an Ohio speeding ticket is simply an inconvenient event. Nobody likes to get speeding tickets, but it is almost a fact of life that you are going to get one at one point or another.

Ohio has a very extensive point system that is covered under the law of the state and handled by the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles. Although, if you wish to pay your Ohio speeding ticket, you do not do so with the Bureau of Motor Vehicles. Instead, if you were to wish to pay your ticket straight out you would have to do so through the county office that issued you the ticket.

Speeding tickets in Ohio are assigned points based on how many miles over the speed limit you are accused of going. You may receive no points, but you may receive up to 4 points and these points will stay on your driving record for two years.

Non-moving violations such as not renewing your registration on time may result in a ticket as well as a fine, but these are not assessed points and do not go on your driving record.

If you are out-of-state and trying to deal with an Ohio speeding ticket, you have two options. You can travel back to Ohio and contest the ticket in person. However, this requires that you stay in the state or travel back and forth for your court hearings, as they are not all held at once.

Or, the easier method is to hire an attorney. Hiring a lawyer who is familiar with the area will help you to prevent the unnecessary traveling back and forth to deal with the ticket.

If you live in the state, then you can either plead guilty, pay the ticket and it will most likely go on your driving record. You may be able to request traffic school or deferred probation, but that depends on what the court will allow you to do and your past driving history.

You can also plead not guilty, which really means that the prosecution has to prove that you were speeding and that you committed the act in question. You can hire an attorney for this process, or you can defend yourself.

Traffic tickets are generally something that you can handle on your own in court, but you need to be sure you cover your bases. Know the exact law that you are charged of breaking and then determine how you were wrongfully charged.

Takeaways
  • Speeding tickets in Ohio are assigned points based on how many miles over the speed limit you went.
  • Ohio has an extensive point system that is covered under the law of the state and handled by the DMV
  • Ohio speeding tickets are not difficult to beat like many other states.
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