This Chicago DUI Lawyer has commented here, here, and here
on the criminalization of speeding. I’m
adamantly opposed to it. I think it is a
complete and utter waste of taxpayers time and of our precious and limited
resources when it comes to prosecuting crimes throughout the state, but
especially in the density of a major metropolis like Chicago.
Unfortunately, your state legislators often find these stories more compelling than a lot of the agenda items and Governor Quinn just signed another one.
Gov. Pat Quinn today signed four road safety measures into law including one that toughens penalties for extreme speeders and was inspired by a fatal car crash in southwest suburban Orland Park last summer.
Coined “Julie’s Law,” the legislation was written in response to a two-vehicle crash that killed 17-year-old Julie Gorczynski in June 2011 when a Mazda smashed into the passenger side of her friend’s Jeep. The 21-year-old Mazda driver, who had a history of speeding violations, was found to be traveling at least 76 mph in a 40 mph zone, police said.
The law, which takes effect July 1, 2013, bars judges from giving court supervision, a form of probation, to drivers found traveling more than 25 mph over the limit on a nonrural road or more than 30 mph on a highway. The previous law allowed the probation for drivers caught driving up to 40 mph over the limit.
I'm predicting that in the not-too-distant future driving 25 mph over the limit will result in a criminal charge.
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