Sarah Chen works as a travel nurse across three states, maintaining a nursing license in California and compact privileges in two neighboring states. Points on her California license trigger reporting requirements that could affect her compact status—meaning a traffic stop in another state could cascade into license review proceedings.
When she received a speeding citation in Nevada while driving between assignments, she faced a dilemma: fly back for a court date costing her two days of income, or pay the fine and absorb points that would create administrative complications across state lines.
**The calculation:** A $150 fine was less than the round-trip flight. But the insurance surcharge multiplier over three years would cost $2,200 more than the citation fine itself. Plus, she'd need to disclose the points on her next license renewal in California.
**Using TrafficAppeal AI:** Sarah entered her citation details during a lunch break. The system identified that Nevada traffic court had a specific procedure for requesting a Trial by Declaration—allowing her to submit written evidence without appearing in person. She uploaded the navigation log showing her route and the citation location's speed transition zone.
**Result:** The court reduced the charge to a non-moving violation. No points. No insurance impact. Sarah's compact privileges remained clean.
"I did this between shifts. Didn't miss a single day of work, didn't pay an attorney, and the record shows nothing. That's exactly what I needed." — Sarah Chen, RN