US Michigan man with suspended license logs into Zoom court hearing while driving - He's black

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A Michigan man with a suspended driver's license joined a digital court hearing about his case from behind the wheel of a vehicle he was driving.

Corey Harris did not physically appear in court for his hearing on May 15. Instead, he dialed into the Zoom call — while he was driving, according to video of the hearing posted on Washtenaw County Judge Cedric Simpson’s YouTube page.


Simpson asked Harris whether he was driving when he joined the hearing. He told Simpson that he was pulling into a parking spot at his doctor's office and would be ready for the hearing in "one second."

After a brief pause and Simpson’s confirming Harris was "stationary," the attorney representing Harris, Natalie Pate, who was in court that day, asked for an adjournment of two to four weeks.
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"OK, so maybe I don't understand something," Simpson said after having appeared to review the case in front of him. "This is a driving while license suspended?"

Pate confirmed he was looking at a case involving driving without a license.

"And he was just driving? And he doesn't have a license?" Simpson asked.

"Those are the charges, yes," Pate said, but Simpson quickly replied: "No, I'm looking at his record. He doesn't have a license. He's suspended, and he's just driving."

Pate, again, confirmed the judge was correct.

Simpson then looked around the courtroom, taking a long pause, an incredulous smile on his face.

He then looked up and said, "I don't even know why he would do that," referring to Harris, who was still on the Zoom call from his car.

Simpson then revoked Harris' bond and instructed him to turn himself into the Washtenaw County Jail by that evening.

Harris dropped his head back and said, "Oh, my God."

It was not immediately clear whether Harris had turned himself in as Simpson requested.

A representative for the court said the judge does not comment on pending cases. Pate could not immediately be reached for comment Wednesday.
 

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How much back child support do you have to owe before the court takes your drivers’ license?
I don't know what triggers that action in Michigan, but the state is gung-ho about tracking down and taking action against parents that have child support arrearages. In addition to suspending licenses, Michigan also requires employers to report new hires and does a background check on large-prize lottery winners to see if they have past due child suppport that can be pursued now that there is a confimed income source.

The unreported clearance from 2 years ago doesn't surprise me one bit. Ever since COVID hit, the state has been backlogged with processing certain items. Sure, it's been 4 years since COVID shut everything down, but certain departments within the state goverment still have some combination of backlog, reduced staffing, and the usual incompetence and glacial workflow that comes with any governmental entity.
 
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Ok, new retarded twist to the most retarded set of events ever.

Dude never even had a driver's license in the first place.

"The way I know that he's never had a license is because – on May 3, 1999 he was 19 at the time - he applied for his first Michigan ID," Simpson said. "He has religiously, every year, gotten a new ID. And so he knows that he doesn’t have a license."

In Michigan, you cannot have both a driver's license and a state ID. In October 2023, Harris got into a vehicle accident and told authorities he didn't have a driver's license, prosecutors said Wednesday.
 
Michigan is likely the state with the most personal freedom in the whole union. Not because they have great laws, but because the state and local government is so dysfunctional they can't manage to be oppressive.
Ever wonder how people end up with $30,000 water bills in Detroit? Its because they just can't push the paperwork to get a tech out to turn it off after nonpayment for years. So the meter just keeps spinning.

This Michigan court system couldn't figure out this dude had an open warrant...from Michigan. They arrested him in May and then let him out with out ever checking if he was wanted anywhere else. The judge seems to have stumbled across it while doing a deep dive in the computer to see if he had a DL#.
 
Ever wonder how people end up with $30,000 water bills in Detroit? Its because they just can't push the paperwork to get a tech out to turn it off after nonpayment for years. So the meter just keeps spinning.
It's about half that and half because the techs started catching fists and lead for shutting off water. It was so prevalent in the Detroit Dark Years that they made it a specific crime.
 
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