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Scientist uses physics to dodge traffic ticket

By Associated Press

POSTED:



SAN DIEGO >>A University of California San Diego scientist was able to use his math and physics knowledge to argue his way out of a $400 traffic ticket.

In a paper titled “The Proof of Innocence,” senior research scientist Dmitri Krioukov successfully appealed his failure-to-stop ticket by explaining that he may have appeared to an officer that he didn’t stop when he actually did, according to the Los Angeles Times (http://lat.ms/I5ZCUw ).

“All you need to know is classical mechanics and a little bit of geometry,” Krioukov told the Times.

The calculations were very simple and took five to ten minutes, and writing the four-page paper took a few hours, Krioukov said. 

The time spent on the paper was a minor inconvenience considering the cost of a lawyer and the ticket, he said.

According to Krioukov’s calculations, a car moving at a constant speed can appear to move in the same way as a car that is moving quickly and briefly stops before accelerating again.

Krioukov also told the judge that a campus building obstructed the officer’s view of the incident.

The scientist posted his paper online for any other motorists who may be accused of running a stop sign.






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eastside808 wrote:
dont think that physics and math were the reasons he didnt get the ticket but more the campus building that obstructed the officer's view that was the key point. had the officer had an unobstructed view it could have gone either way.
on April 19,2012 | 07:27AM
fstop wrote:
After being accused of not making a complete stop at a stop sign, a friend challenged the officer in court by tossing his keys in the air when on the stand and asking him if he saw the keys stop. The officer truthfully said "No." and then my friend proved that the keys had to have stopped, just like he did at the stop sign. He won his case.
on April 19,2012 | 07:38AM
Tony96822 wrote:
Wow,and my cousin got a DUI for driving his bike on Kalakaua and they put him in jail. Lose money.
on April 19,2012 | 09:39AM
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