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Woman receives $72 ticket after honking her horn at a police vehicle

HONOLULU (KHON) — A woman honked her horn at a vehicle then got a ticket for it.

It happened in Waipahu, at the intersection where Farrington Highway meets Mokuola Street, by Tammy’s Polynesian Market.

Lynette Atuaia says she used her horn, thinking another driver was about to cut her off and cause an accident.

She says she did not realize the driver was a police officer until he pulled her over and handed her a $72 ticket.

“I’m looking out of my peripheral vision. I go, ‘Hey!’” Atuaia said.

Atuaia said she beeped her horn only once. She says she was halfway through an intersection on Farrington Highway when she saw the hood of a car parallel to her.

“I was afraid. I thought I was going to hit him. My initial reaction was, ‘Hey, get out of my way. I’m going to hit you. You’re cutting me off!’” she explained. “Then when I pulled over into the parking lot, he just said, ‘License and registration, I’m giving you a ticket for honking your horn.’ He said I should have seen I was an emergency vehicle, but he didn’t have his lights and sirens on as he was trying to cut me off or pass me.”

From July 2017 to January 2018, the state’s Traffic Violations Bureau says five citations were given out for “unnecessary use of horn” on Oahu.

“I’m not too sure. It’s one of those real common things. Everybody is honking their horn everywhere, right, so they might not know that,” said driving instructor Lenard Wong of Wong Way Driving School.

Under Sec. 15-19.27 Horns and warning devices, the law states, “The driver shall, when reasonably necessary to ensure safe operation, give audible warning with his or her horn; but shall not otherwise use such horn when upon a highway.”

Sec. 15-19.27 Horns and warning devices.

(a) Every motor vehicle when operated upon a highway shall be equipped with a horn in good working order and capable of emitting sound audible under normal conditions from a distance of not less than 200 feet; but no horn or other warning device shall emit an unreasonably loud or harsh sound or a whistle. The driver of a motor vehicle shall, when reasonably necessary to ensure safe operation, give audible warning with his or her horn; but shall not otherwise use such horn when upon a highway.

“The only time you should be using your horn is in case a situation where it might be dangerous, warning somebody, ‘Hey, please, I’m here.’ Letting you know I’m here and avoid any kind of collision or conflict with a driver,” explained Wong.

When asked for comment, a spokeswoman at the Honolulu Police Department wrote in an email response: “If the driver feels the ticket was issued in error, she can contest it.”

Atuaia says she is contesting the citation.