A Bike Ride
A friend of mine was riding his bicycle, albeit in the “wrong” direction, in a bike lane in the City a few weeks ago. He was stopped by a policeman for riding the wrong way and was asked for identification. Unfortunately, my friend didn't have any identification on him or in his bike pack.
One thing led to another -- although I have no reason to believe that my friend instigated anything -- and soon there were four police cars on the scene and he and his bike were thrown into cars and taken to the Police Station. He was put into a holding cell while they verified his identity. He is not sure how they finally checked that he was who is claimed to be, but after an hour-and-a-half he was given a ticket for riding his bike the wrong way and released.
He paid the ticket on line. (He then learned that the ticket carried three points on his driver’s license!)
I remember traveling to Brazil many, many years ago when the country was just coming out of years of military rule. I was with a Brazilian who panicked when he realized that he had forgotten his wallet and identification. He drove back home to get it. I remember thinking about how nice it was to have the freedom not to have to carry identification.

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And your dog shouldn't being doing his "business" on the sidewalk, either.
Sidewalks are for walking.
See my future blog post.
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“May I see your license?”
Here’s an interesting conundrum. You don’t need a driver’s license to ride your bike, but in at least one state (California) you will need to present a driver’s license or its “functional equivalent” (a state ID, a Passport, or a military ID) if you are stopped for a violation and the officer asks you to produce ID. Failure to produce the requested ID can lead to a trip to jail. So can lying about your identity, and not just in California. And the officer’s fishing expedition for evidence may continue here as well. If the officer asks about information on your driver’s license, he is still looking for evidence—for example, evidence that the information on your license is not up to date, which is another offense you can be ticketed for. Again, the best answers here are those that don’t incriminate you. If your license information is up to date, feel free to answer the officer’s question. If it is not up to date, have an explanation ready. Better yet, get your license up to date now and carry it, or other ID that law enforcement officers in your state accept, on your rides.
Source: http://www.bicyclelaw.com/p.cfm/legal-issues-for-cyclists/how-to-handle-a-traffic-ticket
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