Motorists issued a  traffic ticket in Massachusetts will have to pay money to the state  whether or not they committed the alleged crime. According to a state  supreme court ruling handed down yesterday, fees are to be imposed even  on those found completely innocent. The high court saw no injustice in  collecting $70 from Ralph C. Sullivan after he successfully fought a  $100 ticket for failure to stay within a marked lane.
Bay State  drivers given speeding tickets and other moving violations have twenty  days either to pay up or make a non-refundable $20 payment to appeal to a  clerk-magistrate. After that, further challenge to a district court  judge can be had for a non-refundable payment of $50. Sullivan argued  that motorists were being forced to pay "fees" not assessed on other  types of violations, including drug possession. He argued this was a  violation of the Constitution's Equal Protection clause, but the high  court justices found this to be reasonable.
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