- Jurisdiction
- California
Hello everyone,
I had a question about a scenario and figured this would be the best place to ask!
If someone is driving slowly, hogging the passing lane on a 4 lane road, (2 lanes either direction) and you pass them on the right, then switch lanes back to the left and come within a couple feet of their front bumper, if they have a dash cam can they send that footage to the police and can you be charged with reckless driving after the incident occurred? You did not cause an accident or hit their car, just came close.
This got me thinking...in this day in age where everything is recorded, cameras are almost everywhere, people have dash cams etc........where lies the line between real and fake?
if the person who got cut off sent this to the police, could the police actually charge the other offending driver? Even if the dash cam had a clear view of the offending driver, how do they actually prove who it is? What are the defenses, if any, that could be used by the "offending driver"? Could a defense be made that the dashcam does not accurately show distance and depth perception? Can you say that its a computer generated video? When is video evidence admissible in court and when....is it not? Does an officer have to witness this in PERSON for the driver to be charged? Is there a time frame after the incident where the "offending'' driver could be charged (ie statute of limitations). Lets say this happened in the great state of California.
As im sure is pretty obvious, I am not a lawyer. But my gut instinct says nothing will happen as nothing really happened at the time. Also, something like this might be a waste of time for the police. However, It got me thinking. Thank you all in advance!!!!
I had a question about a scenario and figured this would be the best place to ask!
If someone is driving slowly, hogging the passing lane on a 4 lane road, (2 lanes either direction) and you pass them on the right, then switch lanes back to the left and come within a couple feet of their front bumper, if they have a dash cam can they send that footage to the police and can you be charged with reckless driving after the incident occurred? You did not cause an accident or hit their car, just came close.
This got me thinking...in this day in age where everything is recorded, cameras are almost everywhere, people have dash cams etc........where lies the line between real and fake?
if the person who got cut off sent this to the police, could the police actually charge the other offending driver? Even if the dash cam had a clear view of the offending driver, how do they actually prove who it is? What are the defenses, if any, that could be used by the "offending driver"? Could a defense be made that the dashcam does not accurately show distance and depth perception? Can you say that its a computer generated video? When is video evidence admissible in court and when....is it not? Does an officer have to witness this in PERSON for the driver to be charged? Is there a time frame after the incident where the "offending'' driver could be charged (ie statute of limitations). Lets say this happened in the great state of California.
As im sure is pretty obvious, I am not a lawyer. But my gut instinct says nothing will happen as nothing really happened at the time. Also, something like this might be a waste of time for the police. However, It got me thinking. Thank you all in advance!!!!