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SheriM
02-10-2017, 10:41 AM
I was completely dressed with wig, makeup, short skirt, hose, etc, driving 78 in a 75 speed zone on a Kansas interstate. A highway patrol pulls up beside me then backs off and turns on the lights. There was nothing I could do but own it. He walks to the passenger window and identifies himself. He says I was going about 80 but is quick to add that there will be no ticket. I give him my license, he asks for proof of ins and then gives the proof of ins back. He asks for registration and I fumble around because I don't know what it looks like. In the meantime, he is chatting. I find the registration and he returns it. He doesn't like where I have the GPS mounted so I move it. He says drive safely and returns to his car and turns off the front flashing lights. I think that this is my Q to leave and do so. Stop at a gas station and I cant find my license. Now I'm thinking that he has it and was writing a warning when I left and the entire state will be after me for evading an officer, throw me on the ground in my skirt and take me to jail. Well, I cant wait to get out of Kansas and finally do get out. For the third time, I search the car and finally feel some plastic under the seat. It is my license. Thank you lord. The rest of the day was uneventful.

AndreaS
02-10-2017, 11:26 AM
I've gotten a speeding ticket while dressed and the officer was very professional. He addressed me as "m'am" when he approached my window. I gave him my license and he didn't bat an eye.
So glad you found your license. I would have worried to death about the whereabouts of it.

Allisa
02-10-2017, 12:07 PM
What time of day was it? He saw a female and with an apparatus on the dash, maybe a radar detector which is illegal in some states. You didn't panic which shows your not doing anything wrong so he performed his duty and off you went, no harm, no foul. My heart pounds so hard when I encounter the authorities and test my deodorant. Things happen everyday and when dressed it's no different. Glad you only got a warning, did he address you as a female after seeing your I.D.?

Territx
02-10-2017, 12:11 PM
That will get your heart pumping!!! :eek:

MelanieAnne
02-10-2017, 12:20 PM
driving 78 in a 75 speed zone on a Kansas interstate. A highway patrol pulls up beside me then backs off and turns on the lights. There was nothing I could do but own it. He walks to the passenger window and identifies himself. He says I was going about 80 but is quick to add that there will be no ticket.

I have a real problem with this. It's happening everywhere. They stop you for the slightest reason, or even make up a reason, "We're looking for a vehicle like yours", just to stop you and run you through the computer. It's not much different than checkpoints, which were ruled illegal by the courts. They check your drivers license, registration, insurance, check you for warrants, then let you go with some BS warning for something you didn't do in the first place. :eek:

A similar thing happened to me a few years ago, when I was on my way home from work, in guy mode, around 3am. I knew the cops in a certain community were bad, and I was going EXACTLY the speed limit. A cop sneaks up behind me with his headlights out, and suddenly lights me up and stops me. He comes up to my window, and insults my intelligence by telling me I was going about 10 miles over the limit. Then he quickly says not to worry about it, he just needs to check my license and my sobriety. He shines his flashlight around in my car and lets me go. In 1930s Munich, they used to say, "Your papers please". What they do today is no different!!!

Tracii G
02-10-2017, 12:52 PM
I was a commercial truck for over 40 years and DOT check points were very common.
Police even pulled me over just to check my bills and log book.
Here is and idea don't speed and keep your paperwork current and if you get pulled over keep your cool.
The police aren't out to get you like some people think.
I have been pulled over while CDing and its not a big deal.
Give the cop your DL and registration if he asks and act like you dress like that 24/7.

BLUE ORCHID
02-10-2017, 12:54 PM
Hi Sheri:hugs:, I was braking out in a cold sweat following along with your story...:daydreaming:...

Lana Mae
02-10-2017, 01:02 PM
Sheri, know you were scared but you did fine! Glad you found your license! Hugs Lana Mae

Phillipa1uk
02-10-2017, 02:39 PM
Stop at a gas station and I cant find my license.

Excuse my ignorance but why do you need your license when your at the petrol station? Or was it just at that moment you realised you had temporarily mislaid it? I've been out dressed many times, luckily never stopped. Not sure what I'd do if I was and my license is the old UK paper style :) lol

Angie G
02-10-2017, 02:50 PM
WOW I think I would be pooping bricks. I have family in lawenfocement I woun;t want to find out.Glad it worked out for you Sheri.:hugs:
Angie

Julie MA
02-10-2017, 05:06 PM
Reminds me of the time I robbed a bank in drag. They are still looking for me.

Dana44
02-10-2017, 05:22 PM
Sheri, Yeah the transportation police and DOT stuff, they may stop and ask for your information. Crazy stuff and hopefully they will stop that activity after while.

Nikki A.
02-10-2017, 07:32 PM
You're doing nothing wrong dressed or not. I must admit I have never been stopped dressed, but I have been pulled over more times than I care to mention. Best advise, stay cool, be professional and courteous and more often than not even if you have done something wrong you can get away with just a warning. Yes some cops are pretty picky but remember they are doing their job and if treated courteously they will be the same.
Best story, I was driving home from work and got pulled over by a trooper late in the evening. Seems when I got gas, I went in for a cup of coffee. As I'm walking out the attendant was walking in and said I was done (NJ is a full service only state). I get in the car and go. Seems the hose was still in the tank and I pulled away and the connector split and the end of the hose was dangling just above ground level. Well of course I get pulled over and he asks me to walk to the back of my car on the passenger's side. Well after it was decided that I did not steal the gasoline and after back-up arrived, the other officer asked me how long was I driving, I duck my head in and say 7.4 miles. At that point they both just laughed, he said there has to be some ticket to be written, but under the circumstances go back to the station NOW, return the hose and have a good night. I went back the guy thanked me for returning his hose and nothing else happened. Other than losing almost a half hour back tracking and paying an extra toll not to bad.

andreanna
02-10-2017, 08:12 PM
DOT never rests, they are trying to keep the general public safe. If you drove commercially you would understand that they are trying to find drivers that don't stop after 11 hours driving, driving tired. The general public has no idea of the regulations we are under.

Lauri K
02-10-2017, 08:24 PM
I think some of the issue here is KANSAS, a state that has a history of far over reaching the law against ordinary citizens.

And for the police to reprimand you over where your GPS is located is ludicrous and again overreaching.

I think he just wanted to ask for a date.............otherwise he would have not backed off and then pulled you over and been so quick to say "there will be NO ticket"

Glad it all worked out for you though, I try to drive the speed limit and keep my car clean, all the lights working, etc. and have not had any troubles.

Marianne S
02-10-2017, 09:24 PM
I'm glad this went well for you, Sheri. Mind you, I AM surprised that the officer even bothered to stop you for going a mere 78 (or maybe 80) where the speed "limit" was already 75. In my experience, apart from a few jerks back in the mid-1970s when they first imposed that wretched 55mph speed limit after the 1974 oil crisis, cops will usually give you another 10mph over the limit before they bother stopping anybody.

I admit we've been spoiled over the past few years here in Phoenix where I live. For some reason very few cops here have been harassing drivers recently. It has made driving nice and relaxing. I do of course mean "relaxing" in the sense of not having to worry about some cop jumping on us for exceeding their speed "limit," which makes spirited driving more fun. Traffic on the freeways routinely moves at 80mph and more in places where the nominal limit is 65. And I've been passed more than once by cars doing 70mph in the right-hand lane of an urban divided highway where the speed "limit" is 40. But if we all pay attention to our driving as we SHOULD (as opposed to the morons who think they can TEXT while driving!) we should be watching out for and expecting things like that anyway. Driving is a full-time occupation, not something we do (like stirring the beef stew now and then) while watching TV.

I'm afraid this MAY be a temporary situation in Phoenix because state budgets have been cut back during the recession of the last few years. So the gallant police officers we are left with have had their hands too full dealing with REAL criminals, robberies and shootings and whatnot, to bother the rest of us otherwise law-abiding citizens on the road. That happy situation may not last if the economy improves and they start beefing up the force of Men in Blue again. Meanwhile, I'm making the most of this relaxing time.

I also know there are those small towns all over America where speed "traps" are deliberately set to extort revenue out of luckless tourists who happen to be passing through at a perfectly safe 29mph--except that the extortionists set their speed "limit" at 25!

In spite of it all, I AM still surprised you got stopped for doing only 78!

What I'm NOT surprised about is that the officer didn't give you any grief about being dressed. Although I myself have never been stopped on the road while dressed, that does seem to be the experience I've heard about from most people. It's not as bad as they feared. I have two observations about this.

First, cops in their occupation get to see the WHOLE GAMUT of human variations. Robbers, gangsters, murderers, alcoholics in the gutter, domestic violence, child abusers, junkies and drug dealers, prostitutes and pimps, gay people, straight people, psychotics and other mentally ill people, pedophiles and other perverts, psychopaths and weirdos of every kind. Seen against the background of that "human zoo," a guy who's only crossdressing is downright NORMAL! Cops have seen it all, and they've seen it all before! Danny Reagan might not even bother mentioning to his wife Linda that he stopped a crossdresser today, because in New York City it's so routine.

Second, let's put ourselves in the shoes of a cop who's just stopped a car for whatever reason. What's he most afraid of? That there might be some scumbag with a GUN in there who's going to shoot him! Next to that, he probably wants the encounter to go smoothly. If the driver gives him a load of grief, that's going to tick him off and he won't be in a good mood.

If it turns out to be some guy who's crossdressed, it wouldn't surprise me if the cop actually feels RELIEVED! "Is that all it is?" Barring prejudice, it may be just an "entertaining" encounter to a cop, no more than if he'd stopped a guy wearing a clown costume. "It's all in a day's work..."

Just as important, anyone who's stopped by a cop while crossdressed is likely to feel nervous about the encounter. But that's fine from the cop's point of view, because the crossdresser on that account is likely to be POLITE and RESPECTFUL during the exchange. It's the jerk who gets aggressive and comes on with an "attitude" who's going to get the cop's back up: more likely to get a ticket or even get arrested. If it's been the cop's experience in the past (as it may well have been) that crossdressed males are "easy to deal with," he's quite likely to have a benign attitude toward us.

These are just my own thoughts on the topic. Cops are only human beings, the same as the rest of us. Of course, a few of them are jerks too, just as a certain minority of all human beings are jerks, and need handling all the more carefully for that reason. But my own experience of cops (even though I wasn't crossdressed) has been benign enough.

It would be interesting to know from anyone here who happens to have a personal friend in the police force (whether they're "out" to that friend or not) what cops themselves have to say on this topic. Including, of course, whether they've had any "training" about what somebody has dubbed the "alphabet community." "Prejudice" can be one factor affecting their attitudes, while "training" is another. But let's not forget all the "ordinary" factors in the life of an ordinary human being who simply has a particular job to do.

----------------------------

Queen Anne was considered rather a remarkable woman... Besides being dead she was extremely kind-hearted and had a very soothing Act passed called the "Occasional Conformity Act" which said that people only had to conform with it occasionally: this pleasant trait in her character was called Queen Anne's Bounty. (The Occasional Conformity Act was the only Act of its kind in History, until the Speed limit was invented.)

- W. J. Sellar and R. J. Yeatman, 1066 And All That

Ressie
02-10-2017, 09:25 PM
I'm sure many officers have seen many CDs driving.

MelanieAnne
02-10-2017, 09:46 PM
I've been stopped several times while dressed and had no trouble. My beef is that in Michigan, at least, they stop people for little or no reason just to "check their papers". In northern Michigan, they were stopping people for having snow on their license plates, during a blizzard! They were writing tickets for "obstructed plates". Apparently we are supposed to stop every quarter mile and brush off the license plates.
The Michigan State police were having a beef with their bosses over perceived quotas. They were ordered to make 2 1/2 "contacts" per hour, unless they were busy with something else. Not necessarily writing a ticket, but they had to make 2 1/2 stops per hour. And that leads to stopping people for nothing, just to fill their log books. I have a clean record and don't get tickets. But people conducting themselves in a lawful manner, with current plates or tabs, have a right to be left alone, and not stopped for some BS reason, just to show activity in some cops daily logbook. My ex wife used to be a LEIN [computer] operator, for MSP and I know how those guys think. The more stops they make, the closer they are to making an arrest. It's just like fishing. The more often you go, the closer you are to catching the big one.

Karyn Marie
02-11-2017, 12:07 AM
Marianne S, very good assessment of police officers. As I have mentioned before on other posts, I am a retired deputy sheriff, having been on the job for 29+ years. I retired six years ago. I am sorry to see some of you are kind of bitter toward the police, but I can only believe you had a bad experience or two when interacting with them. Most officers are very cordial and respectful, and do their jobs to the best of their abilities and within the scope of the law. I would be remiss if I tried to convince you all that there are not bad cops out there, because there are, just like all occupations. Bad apples do slip through the cracks, but usually they are eventually weeded out. Every bad cop that was ever hired on my department, was eventually fired or asked to resign. It is, however, hard to fire a cop, and administrators and IA must have all their ducks in a row, or the bad cop could get his job back.

I was not a big ticket writer. I was a patrol deputy and always felt I had better things to do with my time. Like coffee and donuts....hehehee....just kidding, but seriously, while I might be tied up on a traffic stop, I always felt it gave a bad guy a chance to commit a crime. That being said, I did make stops, but it had to be a major violation of some type. Traffic stops are dangerous, only second to domestic violence. I was never scared or concerned about the stop, or the violator, however I was very cautious and really watched and approached the vehicle slowly. To me, it was not a time to let your guard down. This was often mistaken for arrogance or being discourteous. This was far from the case. I had a wife and children that I wanted to go home to after every shift. I was always polite and courteous to the violator, unless there was something to make me be otherwise. In other words, you get the same respect from me, that I get from you. Many times I received a thank you from the violator even after I wrote them a infraction or citation. I will admit though, the more discourteous a violator was or hostile they were, the odds of getting a ticket went up considerably. We were taught that always know what your are going to do before you exit your patrol vehicle. I usually tried to honor that concept, but many violators "talked" themselves into a ticket.
As for the person in the vehicle, I could care less if they were gay, straight, transgender, crossdresser, black, white, Hispanic or whatever. I strived to treat everyone with respect and dignity. Just because a person violated the law, does not mean they have to be treated with disrespect. Heck, I even received thank you's from people I arrested for not being a jerk to them and leaving them with some dignity. Of course, being a crossdresser myself, and a closet transgender woman might have had something to do with it. On a side note, I am seeing a counselor and am considering transitioning to become a female, having gender affirmation surgery in the future.

Yes, being a police officer can be a difficult job, but it was a very gratifying and honorable job. I would do it all over again. I miss it, and would do it all over again.

Lux
02-11-2017, 01:27 AM
I have only been pulled over once while dressed. Coming home late, I changed lanes without signaling and not noticing a state trooper right behind me! I pull off to the side of the road and did what I remembered to do when I read about getting pulled over. Semi-calmly (yeah right!), I rolled down the windows, turned on an inside light, turned off the car and put my keys up on the dash. He asked for my ID/insurance card and asked if I had been drinking. I said I did have a drinks but much earlier in the evening (it was now 1-2am). He then walked back to his car for what seemed forever! Soon enough another younger trooper showed up to put me through a quick roadside sobriety test. Took off my 4" heels and easily passed. The younger officer was SO polite and as he handed me my drivers license back, smiled and said;"you look amazing". Never figured out why the older officer called the younger guy in and had him do the roadside....

CarlaWestin
02-11-2017, 09:26 AM
Once on a late night dressup drive I was approached by the police.
When one officer asked me why I wanted to dress like a woman, I looked at his female partner wearing an identical uniform and said, "I'm not the only one crossdressed here!"

:straightface:

Stephanie47
02-11-2017, 10:43 AM
OK Carla. I have to ask. What was the retort from either officer.

I will agree the vast majority of stops do involve courteous and professional officers. Occasionally, you do run into a person who should not be an officer. I think it is fairly evident officers are expected to make stops unless he or she is responding to a call for assistance. From what I've seen on the road lately that should not be a problem. I was told by a Washington State Patrol officer (long time family friend) that it is easy to find a reason to pull somebody over. All you have to do is follow behind the car and sooner or later the driver with get so spooked he or she will make a driving infraction. That becomes fairly obvious when your car is the only car on a country road or highway late at night.

Judy-Somthing
02-11-2017, 11:12 AM
You heart must have been pounding, LOL!

MelanieAnne
02-11-2017, 12:20 PM
I looked at his female partner wearing an identical uniform and said, "I'm not the only one crossdressed here!"

Was that when they tazed you? :heehee:

Lea
02-11-2017, 12:32 PM
Many states have regulations against suction mounted cups for gps units. Some states cover them under view obstruction.

5150 Girl
02-11-2017, 01:11 PM
I has a trooper stop me in my old truck. I had lost my front plate and that was his initial excuse for stopping me. I wasn't fully dressed, though I has a little eyeliner, my hair in a ponytail through a ball cap, small stuff like that... He did call me Mam though.
Anyway, he said I stopped you because your front plate is gone and you were not wearing your seat belt. (OSP is nuts on the subject of seat belts and POI) I'm like "What do you mean I wasn't wearing my seat belt, you just watched me unbuckle to get my POI and registration from the glove box!" then he back peddled "oh well back a ways..." he then asks about the plate, and i explained I just notice, and have been checking the lost and found at the places I've been lately. then he's all "I'm going to give you a break on that if you promise to take care of it, however, I have to write you for the seat belt. (I checked, the plate would have been a bigger fine)
Anywho, I go before the judge, plea no contest, told my side(officer watched me unbuckle) the judge looked over the report, and said, "well I don't see in the report where the officer says he actually saw you driving without a belt, so I'm going to find you not guilty."
I think the bottom line here is, it's an older truck with a missing plate, (profiled me as poor) so he was most likely wanting an excuse to look for proof of insurance.

I think in the case of the OP, the patrolman may have been wanting to see, GPS or "fuzz-buster" and maybe a POI check as well. Sounds like he was intent on seeing the POI from the way story was told...

Jenny22
02-11-2017, 01:32 PM
I've had 3 encounters with deputies while partially dressed and wearing lipstick. One deserved citation for expired tabs. All went well each time. I asked the citing deputy if my femme appearance would be reflected in any way on the citation, and he said no. He was very courtious towards me, and I thanked him for that. He smiled and said you're welcome.

MelanieAnne
02-11-2017, 02:00 PM
Sounds like he was intent on seeing the POI from the way story was told...

The insurance companies are leaning on the cops to check POI at every opportunity. And that's a heavy fine in any state. Sometimes they even tow your vehicle. Next time a cop asks for my POI, I'm going to ask him which insurance company he works for! In most states, there is nothing in the insurance laws to regulate the companies or their rates. You have to buy it, and they are free to charge as much as they can.

joandher
02-11-2017, 03:53 PM
In the U K the police have A N P R ( automatic number plate recognition ) in the police cars because insurance and mot and drivers details have to be registered with the D V LA , (driver and vehicle licence authority ) so they don-t even have to get out of their cars unless its something else

SheriM
02-11-2017, 06:50 PM
Alissa, This happened in the early afternoon. The officer did not address me as male of female. He was polite and courteous, and did not address how I was dressed. He asked where I was coming from, which made it difficult to concentrate on finding my registration while trying to answer his q's. Phillipa, my license is kept in a window in my wallet where it is visible when opened. I really don't know why I was pulled over and do not believe it was because I was going 78. When I politely disputed 80, he was quick to say "well it was downhill". While I'm sure I don't pass up close, at 78 mph, it would seem to be difficult to be completely read. After he pulled up beside me, it had to be about something other than speed. A similar stop happened last year, also in Kansas so be careful when driving in Kansas.

MelanieAnne
02-11-2017, 08:00 PM
I have no intent to ever set foot in Kansas. You were probably pulled over because he had no activity in his daily log for the past hour. I'm not being smart. At the end of the shift, the captain or sergeant says, "What did you do all afternoon, or night". In the semi rural area where I live, the night 8pm to 4am shift comes on and they make one traffic stop after another. Maybe 10 stops in the next hour and a half. Then the radio goes silent for the rest of the night, unless they get some BS run for a car/deer accident or other. I've seen them sleeping in one of the roadside parks on several occasions.

Mickitv
02-11-2017, 09:12 PM
I have been stopped when I was getting gas and was partially dressed wearing garter belt and stockings under my tight jeans. I was actually frisked and I knew he felt the straps of the garter belt. This was because someone robbed a store and my car was the same color. He never said anything and wished me a good night.

CarlaWestin
02-12-2017, 11:02 AM
OK Carla. I have to ask. What was the retort from either officer.

A little more story. It was the eighties and there was still quite a bit of perceived homophobia. And, I would drive around fully dressed very late at night. I was taking a short cut behind some businesses that had been broken into previously and the cops were on stakeout. The comment came as they were just starting to understand that I really wasn't any threat. We actually had a good laugh and I was on my way.


Was that when they tazed you? :heehee:
That only happens when I disobey Mistress!

phylis anne
02-12-2017, 06:19 PM
before I moved down to the lower 48 I worked risk mgmt and enforcement in denali nat'l park for 10 years after leaving the commercial fisheries so i worked close in hand with nps enforcement rangers but even closer with the alaska troopers of which I learned much from them , fast forward and am living in wash.sate in the wenatchee area and at the time of this it was our annual apple blossom festival, well the troopers had been stopping every 7th car for whatever reason , I got tagged and all I did with this trooper is politely and professionally ask him repeatedly why I was stopped ,in short he gave up with me and curtly told me to have a nice day on the funny side later he pulled me over again this time fair and square and mentioned my tags were expired and I realized that I had not put them on when I picked them up ,they were in my rig and I showed them to him ,and he was all good with that ,and I mentioned jokingly as long as he were there would he mind installing the tags?? he got a good laugh out of that

kimdl93
02-26-2017, 01:31 AM
Never run from the police.... I had a very frightening experience, when a local patrol car pulled right up to my house as I walked around the neighborhood in the evening. He told me to come to his car, and I did...shaking visibly, I'm sure. He asked me what I was up to, and I told him the truth, I was really just taking a stroll on a quiet summer evening. He said there had been "complaints" about a man dressed as a woman, walking around the neighborhood. But, he spared me the indignity of sitting in the patrol car. We instead talked for about 10 minutes in my house. I explained who I was ...professionally and personally, and that this part of me had been present my entire life. I wasn't out to offend or molest. His initially gruff demeanor shifted to empathy. As he left, he told me that I need not worry about being stopped again. I guess he was convinced I wasn't out to hurt anyone

IllinoisGuy1025
02-26-2017, 01:36 AM
I have had a similar experience. Driving home from a party I had on a black bodystocking, black heels and a thong. Nothing else. He pulled me over and even had me get out of the car and stand next to his vehicle while he wrote me a speeding ticket. I didn't have a wig, or makeup on. Just a guy dressed. I was so freaked but he didn't say nothing and I went on my way

Jenni Yumiko
02-26-2017, 09:32 AM
Another reason why you may have been randomed to think about. Were you on 70 or other co highways headed east? Kansas has high revenue from people traveling to Co back through Kansas with loads of "recreational accoutrements" I was warned about it a few years back when I drove to Denver for a conference. I don't use recreational accoutrements but nonetheless ppl asked why I would drive from chi to Denver instead of a plane.

Just Nikki
02-26-2017, 10:41 AM
Only ventured out driving a few times, but being pulled over is my biggest worry. I'm in the closet and my drivers license shows me with a full beard :o

abby054
02-26-2017, 10:52 AM
In spite of it all, I AM still surprised you got stopped for doing only 78!


I am not at all surprised. I have been stopped by the WA state police for doing (they said) 63 in a 60 zone and for 56 in a 55 zone. Those were expensive tickets. I tried to get a local lawyer with a good reputation to represent me. He told me that he was tired of losing speeding cases to every corrupt judge within a hundred miles. He advised that I should just pay up and not to waste my money on him.

On the other side of the state line in Genessee, Idaho, up to Viola, Idaho, the state cops add 14 mph to the charge. I got a ticket for doing 58 in a 60 zone. The state cop wrote it up as 72. I am an engineer. I know how to calibrate a speedometer. I have heard the same story from many other folks and it averages a 14 mph increase. There is a corrupt judge in the county seat who makes it pointless to take it to court. The one time that I got a ticket there and took it to court, the same corrupt judge threatened to make up more charges if I said anything in court. The locals just smile when they hear stories like this. They know the cops and that judge and where they operate. The place is a remote college town with two state universities and that is how the local government makes its extra money off the students and tourists.

Be careful. Several states have popular songs about corrupt judges.

~Joanne~
02-26-2017, 03:35 PM
I have a real problem with this. It's happening everywhere. They stop you for the slightest reason, or even make up a reason, "We're looking for a vehicle like yours", just to stop you and run you through the computer. It's not much different than checkpoints, which were ruled illegal by the courts. They check your drivers license, registration, insurance, check you for warrants, then let you go with some BS warning for something you didn't do in the first place. :eek:

A similar thing happened to me a few years ago, when I was on my way home from work, in guy mode, around 3am. I knew the cops in a certain community were bad, and I was going EXACTLY the speed limit. A cop sneaks up behind me with his headlights out, and suddenly lights me up and stops me. He comes up to my window, and insults my intelligence by telling me I was going about 10 miles over the limit. Then he quickly says not to worry about it, he just needs to check my license and my sobriety. He shines his flashlight around in my car and lets me go. In 1930s Munich, they used to say, "Your papers please". What they do today is no different!!!

I agree 100% with all of this. They want to make sure they keep their databases up to date i guess is a valid reason and it's not. with all the laws on the books, there is no way for you to keep up with them all and neither can they though they act like they know them.

I was in court once for a BS ticket for "running a yellow light" which the law clearly states that if you can not stop or feel you can not safely stop, you are to proceed through the intersection. I quoted the law, by number, to the JUDGE and he wanted to recess to go look up the law. Obviously I did not allow him to do so because he is suppose to be fully verse in the laws he is judging people for violating but this example makes my point, they only know the laws if it benefits their city.

Driving up along side of you, dropping back and pulling you over is a violation of your rights. they know very well they didn't have any probable cause and they make it up on the fly. The OP did admit she was speeding though so no rights were stripped at will and she got off lucky all the way around not that CDing is against any law that I am aware of.

greeneyes
02-26-2017, 03:47 PM
That only happens when I disobey Mistress![/QUOTE]
:dom:

LOL!!! love it!!