You get a complete court binder — built for your citation, covering both hearings: how the clerk-magistrate hearing works, your word-for-word script, a full officer cross-examination for the appeal, and the defenses most drivers miss. Reviewed and approved by a licensed MA attorney — real legal advice, not a guess.
Built only for Massachusetts citations · Every paid binder reviewed by a licensed MA attorney
In Massachusetts the fine is the smallest part. A "responsible" finding follows you on your insurance for up to six years — often far more than the ticket itself.
One finding can raise your premium for up to six years under the Safe Driver Insurance Plan. See your real number on the cost calculator.
Calculate the cost →You get 20 days from the citation date to demand a hearing. One day late and you've waived the right — there's no easy do-over.
Check your deadline →"I didn't know" doesn't move a magistrate. The right cross-examination of the officer and clean exhibits do — and almost no one walks in with them.
See the binder →You get a finished draft for free. Paying turns it into an attorney-reviewed binder — actual legal advice, prepared for your citation.
When, how fast, and how the officer measured your speed — a one-minute intake.
Where you stand: your exact deadline, your court, and what to expect at your hearing.
Buy a binder and a licensed MA attorney reviews, corrects, and approves every page — usually within 24–48 hours (weekdays).
You arrive with a script, officer cross-examination, and pre-marked exhibits.
The free draft is information, not legal advice. Once an attorney reviews it, your binder is legal advice for your citation.
See exactly where you stand before you spend a cent — what it really costs, whether your license is at risk, and how to fight it.
The fine plus the full six-year SDIP insurance surcharge — the number that should drive your decision.
Estimate the cost →Check your record against every Massachusetts automatic-suspension threshold — and see if you're one ticket away.
Run the check → Strong defenseThe no-fix rule (c. 90C §2) is one of the strongest defenses there is. Check whether your citation was issued properly.
Run the review →You get 20 days from the citation date to demand a hearing. Tell Allie your date and see the exact day you must file by.
Ask Allie →How the clerk-magistrate hearing works, how to request it on time, and what happens through the judge's appeal.
See the process → ★ The productSee exactly what you get — your script, the officer cross-examination, exhibits, and the defenses most drivers miss.
See the binder →Both paid binders are reviewed and approved by a licensed MA attorney — legal advice, not just information.
See where you stand before you spend anything.
A finished, attorney-approved defense — your legal advice.
The full binder, plus time with the attorney directly.
No outcome is guaranteed. We prepare you and a licensed MA attorney reviews your binder — but whether you're found responsible is decided by the clerk-magistrate or judge. We can't and don't promise a win. Secure payment through LawPay.
Patrick has been a licensed Massachusetts attorney for over 20 years, defending drivers in traffic court. He designed the defense logic the AI runs on, and he personally reviews and approves every paid binder — so what you get isn't a template, it's legal advice grounded in how these hearings really go.
Both, depending on the step. The free draft is AI-generated information — not legal advice. The moment you buy a binder, a licensed Massachusetts attorney reviews and approves it for your citation, and at that point it is legal advice, under a limited-scope engagement.
Yes. The AI does the drafting, but no paid binder goes out until Patrick Donovan, Esq. has reviewed, corrected, and approved it — usually within 24–48 hours (weekdays).
The $99 binder is the complete attorney-reviewed defense — script, officer cross-examination, exhibits, and three questions to the attorney. The $299 Enhanced tier adds up to a 30-minute consult by phone or Zoom and priority review.
Missing it usually means an automatic "responsible" finding and the loss of your right to a hearing. Limited late-request paths exist but are granted case by case at the RMV's discretion. Ask Allie to find your exact deadline now.