The thing that would bother me the most, I think, is his explanation to the officer that pulled him over, saying that he didn't like how the person in front of him was driving, so he decided to tailgate? What kind of explanation is that?
I hope his dad realizes that if son got into a serious accident and the other party sues he will be sued also because his name is on the title.
Why in the world would you get involved in this at all? If your son didn't get a ticket then it's over, right? No points on insurance or any ticket to be paid? Why would you put yourself in the middle of this at all - especially with an 18 year old?
It happened, he handled it fine, and life goes on. Stay out of it, mom.
Respectfully, he gets room and board--so he's still a kid until he pays his own way.
I work at a school, things I find out at school, stay at school. I know all kinds of tidbits about my kids, if I acted on them, my kids would be grounded for life.
My opinion is to let it go mom.
These days you can't get a ticket without any one in your house finding out.
I got a ticket a few months after getting my learners (3 actually in the same stop, about 200$ worth).... But the next day the junk mail started rolling in for traffic schools, lawyers, and what have you. And continued for a month after I paid. Besides trying to get to the mailbox first, there was no way i could've kept it a secret.
Respectfully, that's not at all my point. There are plenty of 21 and 22 year olds right now who are still on the mom and dad dime at college. It's not about when you become a self-supporting adult. It's about backing off in your role as a parent to a child who needs guidance and overseeing and letting him or her grow up and learn on his or her own. And this was a great opportunity to do that. One that the OP felt she couldn't or wouldn't take.
I work at a school, things I find out at school, stay at school. I know all kinds of tidbits about my kids, if I acted on them, my kids would be grounded for life.
My opinion is to let it go mom.
That was quick. I didn't tell my dad about my first warning (age 17) until 10 months after I received it.
But the ultimate question is...did you tell your DH (or kids)??A funny update...
I was coming down a main street in my hometown with a 35 mph speed limit. As I crested a small hill I saw a wreck ahead in the opposite - just one car but it was totally smashed in in the front. I was tooling along and the cop stepped out in my lane and held out his hand for me to stop. He said, "Do you know how fast you were going?" I said, "I'm sorry, was I speeding? I didn't think so, but I didn't have my cruise control on so I'm not sure." He said, "It looked like you were coming pretty fast over that hill." Then he gave me a little lecture about speeding and implied that the smashed casr was my fate unless I slowed down.
Not sure how going 41 or 42 instead of 35 is going to cause me to crash, but I was a good driver and crept all the way home, glad that no one was going to rat me out.
Just thought I'd share...![]()
But the ultimate question is...did you tell your DH (or kids)??![]()
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JK - I couldn't resist!!
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But the ultimate question is...did you tell your DH (or kids)??![]()
![]()
JK - I couldn't resist!!
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I was going to ask the same thing.
I think the cop should be more concerned about how fast the crashed car was going.
I would hate to have him tattle on me to anyone I knew!!
I reminded him that he is to maintain his emotions when he gets behind the wheel of the car. I had already looked up all the charges, if he would have gotten the citation instead of just the warning. He would have been looking at $110.00 for reckless operation,another $117.00 court costs, and 2 points on his driver's license.
TC![]()
According to the OP, he got pulled over, received a warning, and you found out later. How did you 'get him out of' something that you weren't even aware of?sbell111 said:I can't imagine why anyone would expect their 18 year old son to inform them that he got pulled over and received a warning. If he got a ticket, that's another thing as might have had an effect on their insurance rates, but not a warning.
He could have at least given me a "Thank You" for getting him out of it!
TC![]()