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On the ticket it says "COURT APPEARANCE - I promise to appear as follows or be subject to arrest."
I did not sign anything at all, so I did not promise to appear.
Possibly, when they send me something in the mail about this, I could conditionally accept that presentment and ask for proof of contract with me on the matter, as well as proof that I am the AARON and not Aaron, upon proof of claim that I showed them some sort of ID establishing an equity relationship with the city, police dept, or court, and upon proof of claim that I am a member of the society whose statutes and subsisting regulations they are enforcing, upon proof of claim that I saw and rejected the original of the carbon copy that the officer handed to me.
Or I could treat their bill (ticket) as a presentment and respond the same way as above. Does this sound appropriate for this situation? Can a bill be treated as a presentment? Thats all that I see it as, just a piece of paper that was handed to me without request for any further action. I wasn't asked to appear by the officer, nor does the ticket ask for anything from me. It simply gives me the option to sign as a promise to appear.
It does say "Indiana complaint and summons" at the top. Does it being a summons change how I should respond to it? Thanks
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