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At attorneys, we often represent clients that come in for misdemeanor or felony offenses that […] The post 10 Rules to Know to Avoid Getting Pulled over appeared first on Harter & Schottland.
At attorneys, we often represent clients that come in for misdemeanor or felony offenses that arise after a traffic stop. More often than not, the more serious charges came about only after an officer made a routine traffic stop for a mundane equipment defect or moving violation oversight. Speeding and not using your signal are obvious reasons for which people get pulled over, but below is our list of 10 lesser known, but very common Rules to Know to Avoid Getting Pulled Over.
1) Make sure all of your lights work, including your tail lights. Having a light out makes you an easy mark for a traffic stop. That first part is rather obvious–though you would be surprised how often stops generate when someone forgets to turn on their lights after leaving a brightly lit parking lot. Further, having your lights on is more complicated than it first appears. You are required to turn your lights on before sunrise and after sunset. Sunset does not necessarily mean when it is dark. The sun does not rise and set like a light switch. For example on December 09, 2013, the sun set at 4:19 p.m., whereas the end of civil twilight (the time until which there was still sufficient lights to see by) occurred at 4:50 p.m. For official sunset and sunrise times, see this site.. You are also required to turn on your headlights when you have your windshield wipers activated–even if you can see clearly–and when weather conditions prevent you from seeing 1000 ft.
2) You cannot have a license plate cover, even if it is clear. This law was only recently changed
, so you may not be aware that it is illegal. However, this is a stop that is not really up to subjective interpretation and the violation is considered a moving violation. In fact, the State of Illinois is so adverse to license plate covers that it is also illegal to sell them and advertise them.
3) When turning left you can turn into either of the available lanes (just make sure to commit to one of the lanes before you turn so you don’t find yourself crossing the dotted lines without signaling.) However, when you turn right, you MUST turn into the closest, or right-hand, lane.
4) Nowhere in Illinois statutes does it say you cannot have anything hanging from your rearview mirror, though many people probably know someone that has been stopped for having an air freshener or rosary hanging from the rearview mirror. What the law does say is that you cannot have an object that materially
obstructs the driver’s view. This allows subjective interpretation by a police officer to decide that anything that you have hanging from your rearview mirror can obstruct the your view and be sufficient basis for a stop.
5) The law also does not say that you cannot have and cracks or defects in your windshield. Again, it has to obstruct your view to be illegal, but this is also a basis for a traffic stop that allows for an officer’s liberal interpretation.
6) The law regarding tinted windows is complicated. It used to be cut and dry: you couldn’t have tinted windshields on front driver/passenger windows unless you had a medical necessity and a doctor’s note. However, recently the law changed to make some allowances. However, the new law is convoluted and difficult to interpret. You still cannot have a tinted windshield (excepting the top 6 inches) but you can have tinted or smoked glass on front side driver and passenger windows if you follow a confusing set of rules. See this link
, before you commit yourself to installing tinted windows or you just may find yourself stopped, ticketed, fined and
forced to remove the tint as a condition of your sentence for that equipment violation. It is no defense to this violation that the car came that way. In fact, the statute specifically says that you have no legal recourse against a seller if you get stopped for this.
7) Along similar lines, all passenger cars in Illinois must have a front and rear license plate. It does not matter if the car you purchased came without a front plate. Further, your license plates should hang straight. While the law qualifies that a loose plate cannot “swing” and hang less than 5 inches fro the ground, this leaves quite a bit of room for an officer to make a stop and check it out.
8) Your license plate cannot be obstructed. This means that it must be free of debris (mud, snow, etc.) and not so rusty that you can’t read it. If you have a plate manufactured before 2004 and it is rusty, you may be eligible for a free replacement. See this link at the Illinois Secretary of State
for more information. Obstructed license plates could also mean tow hitches that are located in front of a plate making it difficult for an officer to read the plate. While an appellate court case was recently decided holding that this was not, in fact, a plate obstruction under the statute, that case is being appealed. In the meantime, it allows officers to continue to make a subjective determination that the license plate is obstructed.
9) With very few exceptions, extra lights or colored lights on your vehicle are illegal. For headlights, you are only allowed to have “white light, including that emitted by HID lamps, or light of a yellow or amber tint for use by a motor vehicle.” Also, unless you are some sort of emergency vehicle, you cannot have flashing or oscillating lights.
10) All people in a car must now use a seat belt. This law has slowly gotten more and more restrictive for drivers and their passengers. It was not too long ago that not wearing a seat belt, by itself, was not even a reason for which law enforcement could pull you over. Now, not only must the driver and passenger wear seat belts but even backseat passengers must wear seat belts.
When the law allows room for interpretation, you may find yourself being pulled over for an offense that can later be challenged. Unfortunately, if you are to be later vindicated, you must first be stopped. Traffic stops can lead to other violations. This is not a list designed to allow you to break more laws, or “get a away with” breaking laws. However, if you already think of yourself as an easy target to police, do not give them an invitation to make a traffic stop.
The post 10 Rules to Know to Avoid Getting Pulled over appeared first on Harter & Schottland.
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