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Thai court rules traffic fines unlawful since 2020


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Posted

Another action to make the roads safer surely with all the holidays and the rush hours... Solution is easy enforce the law and rise the fines as the fines and punishment are too low... Than a court can decide if it is a correct fine or not

Posted

Roadside payments have been in place for decades if not longer.. as for challenging the amount, that has always been negotiable, depending on the infringement

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Posted

I find it interesting that these regulations came in just around the time the law was changed regarding cannabis. It occured to the cynic in me that the loss of side revenue from busting people for cannabis related offences would be offset by the increase in side  revenue from traffic related offences. But then I thought surely not; this would require the coordination of systematic, endemic corruption from the bottom to the top - unthinkable. It must just be a coincidence these traffic laws were so hastily pushed through at that time and as a result were found to be unlawful at a later date.

  • Haha 1
Posted
16 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

police had misled motorists into believing they had no right to dispute their tickets.

 

The court found this practice to be in violation of Section 29 of the constitution, which guarantees that all accused individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty.

It is the verbal statements made to motorists that's unlawful. The fines are legal. Two separate actions.

Fined motorists should have the right to challenge the police statements as being unlawful and challenge the fine, as such the alleged fine should deferred to adjudication. But a traffic ticket should be issued and acknowledged by the driver's signature. Whether the police choose to enforce the fine I court is another matter.

Posted

to be honest a maximum speeding ticket of TBH 1,000 or the same for running a red light is a joke. That should be increased for road safety imo.

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