Do the police ever go after speeding sport-bike riders?

In a town near here the police turned to social media to catch a dangerous motorcyclist. He had been doing wheelies near the 4th of July festivities on a crowded road among heavy traffic and pedestrians. He fled the scene at 90+ mph, and was seen other times going 100+. In this case, the motorcycle did not have a license plate, and the rider didn’t have a motorcycle endorsement, because of course he didn’t. A tip from Facebook is what led to his arrest.

I ride, and I get that it can be fun to get the front tire up, and push the limits, but dude, not in traffic with lots of pedestrians.

…and the cops will chase anyone with an unreadable plate: How do they know the bike isn’t stolen?

You really have no idea what you are talking about.

You have been eaten by a gruck.

There is no contradiction in that someone (e.g., Ghost Rider) can be a skilled professional motorcyclist– indeed, that is a sine qua non for many of these stunts– and at the same time pulling wheelies at 200+ mi/h and racing through traffic remains insanely risky and dangerous. Actually it’s completely OK if you take on all the risk, but of course not if others are endangered.

Don’t I? Without a plate, how can you prove it belongs to you and is not stolen?

:Sigh: That should be truck, not gruck. I have never seen a gruck. :stuck_out_tongue:

Last year I rode my bike around without a plate for two months. How? California doesn’t give out temporary tags. If you buy a new bike, you get a temporary registration to stick under the seat or wherever. I never got chased. Didn’t even get pulled over.

Can you elaborate on how the other member is wrong?

Not being able to read a plate is not the same thing as a stolen car and there are no departments who will treat it that way. In other words cops will not chase anyone with an unreadable plate because it might be stolen.

I won’t dispute that is what cops really do, but in general, isn’t a non-visible plate a violation? Are you saying nobody would ever get pulled over for that?

I think I’ll want to check West’s Annotated California Vehicle Code notes for that one.

The point at issue is not whether a non-visible plate is a violation. It probably is in all 50 states and is in every state I’ve ever checked. Net of special circumstances addressed below.

The point at issue is whether your ordinary average policeman, upon seeing a vehicle lacking a clearly visible plate will immediately jump to the conclusion that the vehicle must be stolen and will almost always use that as the probable cause to do a traffic stop. Our policemen here have said that’s not how it’s done in their departments. A small sample, but better than the guesswork the rest of us have to go on.

Now take no plate, a bad tail light, a junkermobile, and 4 mopes on board all together and the officer might decide a fishing expedition will pay off.

As said by others above, in some states there are no temporary plates. Newly sold cars often drive around for a couple months with no plate. It’s not unusual at all in those states.

Michigan still has temporary “plates” for dealers who aren’t authorized to issue registrations and permanent plates by the Secretary of State. and I’ve seen a number of vehicles- usually SUVs- where the temp tag was taped on the inside of the backlite, and the tint on the backlite was dark enough to make it hard to see that it had the tag. and as far as I know the po-po don’t pull over those vehicles left and right. they might drive behind them long enough to see if it has a temp tag.

What’s a mope?

Whatever it is, don’t call me one. (Mean Streets obligatory cite TK.)

A lazy lowlife. See mope - Wiktionary The sort of folks who hang out on street corners not doing much but are ready to follow any leader who’s got the initiative to go mug a passerby or whatever.

c.f. Goon.

Surely you’ve heard of the made up criminal offense “mopery with intent to gawk.” Po’ folks been gettin’ busted for that all over this fine land for many, many years now.

Mopery is what mopes do. Hanging out looking like trouble without necessarily being trouble. At least not at this instant moment.

You are exactly right most sportbike riders mount their tags at a 45 degree angle

An obscured plate is a motor vehicle violation. It’s not presumptive evidence of a stolen vehicle.

I thought “mopery” was exposing yourself to a blind person…