Okay, but to be successful here, baowu2 would need to convince the judge that the CO was wrong to give him a ticket for fishing without his license. He would need to convince that judge that he was only fishing for 5 minutes, that he had stopped prior to the CO ticketing him, and that he was not going to fish again after the CO left (I am not sure if the judge would accept his own buddies as credible witnesses to this, so he would need to get a stranger who was there to vouch for him). Then he would need to convince the judge that the CO acted unjustly, or unfairly by not allowing him to produce a valid license (one dated prior to the date of the offense) at a later date to show that he did have a license even though he did not have one on him at the time. I just do not see this being successful. Since the two offenses, fishing without a license (article 12) and failing to provide a valid license to an officer when asked to produce one (article 97) both carry the same penalties, it is even questionable of getting the fine reduced.
[/b]
Fines can be reduced for a number of reason. Financial income, grey area of the offense, paying before a set date, and so on....
You might be better to strike a deal with the officer outside of court to save his time and ensure a settlement that works in your favor....
Explain to him that you are not a well of person and that this was a honest mistake that should be forgiven. Be very nice about it!!!
OR (if the above fails to provide)
Dealing with the officers supervisor and explaining that the failure to advise of the 7day grace was unfair and unjust and explain how you feel about it in a very nice and pleasant way.
I've gotten many people in trouble for acting poorly on the job, including cops, government agents and many private agents. I've also learned allot by going threw the appropriate channels of authority even if the offense still stands.
And attitude will get you no where...
Being nice and friendly will