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Would you take a $10 parking ticket to court?
#23
(09-15-2020, 05:14 PM)fredtoast Wrote: He knew why the officer was chalking his tires and asking would not have made any difference in what happened. You think that if he asked why then the officer would have said it was okay to remove the chalk?

The officer was in the wrong yet you defend him.

Why defend the person who was in the wrong?

How is that "being right" or "doing right"?

If Matt's friends knew than you know. Why was the officer marking the tires?

The officer was not wrong in determining how long a car remains in a two hour limit. The technique can be called into question. Perhaps post a warning sign. "Length of stay may be determined by chalking tires. Parking here gives consent.

IMO attitudes like Matt's friend's and the support of folks are far more destructive than productive. 

Of course it's my opinion and I'm sure you have yours and as Matt's friend says: He was being defiant. 

We are so juvenile at times. 
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RE: Would you take a $10 parking ticket to court? - bfine32 - 09-15-2020, 05:44 PM

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