I was driving to work today on the 990.I see a crown vic and notice its not a cop.Im going about 77mph .I pass the guy doing 60 in the left lane.
Next thing i know i got a red light in my rear view and its only one thats on the dash.Its only red too.I pull over and before i even reach into my pocket this guy is next to me in his vehicle.I roll down my window and he starts yelling.
“Whats the rush”
im not
“I should call someone over here and have them write you 5 summons for speeding,tailgating, wreckless driving.Your lucky im late for a meeting”
He then tells me to slow it down and pulls on his way.
He NEVER identified himself as a cop.
If he in fact was an off-duty cop and called a cop on-duty to come over.Could that on-duty cop write me tickets even though he didnt see any infractions and its all from word of mouth of this off-duty cop?
If i were to pull away, consequences ?
Before anyone says to stay the speed limit and it wont be a problem.Dont bother posting.
If he was actually a cop, yes. Cops are never off duty. They are expected to act in any situation requiring their intervention regardless of on the clock or not. The officer that would write the tickets would be on duty and using the sworn statement for the stopping officer to incriminate you.
Police are trained to estimate speed visually. I have been pulled over several times in the city and told I was speeding, given an approximation of my speed and told that he had no radar gun in the car.
Only if it’s State Police. The only agency barred from pulling people over for routine traffic stops with undercover cars in NY is the State Police. Town, county, parks etc can all pull you over with an unmarked and if you just keep driving while waiting for a marked car to show up expect to have evading tacked on to any other laws you break.
I am not saying this is not true but how do they do this? Just match your speed? But 99.9% of people will slow down before the speed can be matched if a car is flashing lights at them to pull over
They don’t have to pace you. They are trained to visually estimate speed, and it holds up in court. It’s really not that hard with a little training to learn to accurately (+/- a few MPH) judge the speed of a car going under 90 mph. And the longer you sit there with a radar gun that can confirm your guess the better you’re going to get at it.