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Hi Mr. Peabody:
Mr. Peabody wrote:...a JP who allows officers to rewrite tickets right in court during trial.
Simon Borys wrote:...a conviction under a rewritten ticket like that would be quashed with prejudice on appeal.
The key words are 'rewrite tickets'. If it is an amendment under s. 34 of the HTA, it can lawfully done under certain circumstances. In the case of an amber/red light situation, the certificate can not be lawfully amended.
If the officer writes a new ticket, the certificate should be quashed on appeal as Simon says. Although, I think that with or without prejudice does not apply because the decision of the appellate court is final and reviewable by a higher court. The Crown can not later on re-initiate proceedings for the same offence without a successful apeal.
BTW Mr. Peabody, I was wondering if you could provide us with the four-digit number located on top-left of your ticket. It's called Icon Location Number, which identifies the provincial offences court.
Personally, I am interested in comparing procedural differences between jurisdictions.
Cheers.
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