A difference in the West Virginia law
Apr. 19th, 2010 09:29 amIf you have been on highways, you have seen
the signs that tell you what you have to pay
if they should catch you littering. In my
experience, I've often seen a fine
of, say, three hundred dollars if the road
is notably a scenic one. The most
that you'll incur for littering in West
Virginia? Twenty-five (yes) thousand bucks,
as well as points on license, term in jail.
They have this sign on all the interstates.
All I can say is "West Virginia, yay!"
the signs that tell you what you have to pay
if they should catch you littering. In my
experience, I've often seen a fine
of, say, three hundred dollars if the road
is notably a scenic one. The most
that you'll incur for littering in West
Virginia? Twenty-five (yes) thousand bucks,
as well as points on license, term in jail.
They have this sign on all the interstates.
All I can say is "West Virginia, yay!"
no subject
Date: 2010-04-19 03:05 pm (UTC)when looking out your open window as
the pretty southern scenery goes by.
no subject
Date: 2010-04-19 06:51 pm (UTC)you should toss coal from windows of your car,
so they can't pin the crime on you and B.
no subject
Date: 2010-04-20 09:16 am (UTC)And wonder if it ever gets enforced.
For one thing (note: a lawyer, I am not),
It seems that ought to violate
The Eighth Amendment, which says "excessive fines"
Shall never be imposed. And twenty-five
(no!) Thousand—well, that seems excessive, yes?
no subject
Date: 2010-04-20 01:02 pm (UTC)informing stoppers at an overlook
that they were being filmed. So I believe
it is enforced at least from time to time.
As for the Eighth Amendment, I should note:
this is the maximum you'll have to pay.
So probably it's mostly for extremes,
but makes a big deterrent for the rest.
(Though there was lots of litter near that sign!)