June 14, 2025

Manibusan urges other ways to make traffic offenders pay up

CNMI Attorney General Edward Manibusan has commented on a House of Representatives bill to require rental car agencies to confirm that customers have valid driver’s licenses, and make all owners of vehicles, or other persons employing—or otherwise directing the operators of vehicles—financially liable for any fines impose on rental drivers who leave the Commonwealth.

In a letter to the House Ways and Means Committee, Manibusan said the second objective of H.B. 19-53 is “unworkable,” and called on lawmakers to find an alternative to enforcing payment of traffic fines against those who fail to pay. Lawmakers should revisit a driver’s license forfeiture law that was repealed several years ago, he added.

“We are concerned with the impact of the second objective,” Manibusan said. “Although the intent is to deal with visitors and the car rental industry…the amendment…extends beyond them.”

He said the action prohibited by the bill is the failure to appear in court for traffic citation, “but the bill punishes the rental car agency—not the driver—for that action.”

The government generally has the authority to punish a person for acting contrary to law, or failing to act when the law requires them to do so, but the bill, Manibusan said, “goes beyond the government’s authority” by penalizing rental car companies for the acts of a party that are beyond the companies’ control.

Manibusan said lawmakers should consider other alternatives to ensure traffic offenders—and residents and visitors alike—pay their fines. “Requiring a car rental company to pay a bond ensure payment or automatically revoking driver’s licenses if the traffic fine is unpaid should be explored,” he said.

0 thoughts on “Manibusan urges other ways to make traffic offenders pay up

  1. Why not just have to cops just take the Driver’s license of the tourist driver and immediately drop the license at the rental car company with a copy of the ticket (even photo copy) have the car company staff sign for the license on top of the ticket book.
    The car company then can collect the fine, and return the tourist license. In the case that the car company does not collect the fine they can be obligated to pay the fine.
    It is not good to have these tourists, who are on a limited stay, waste much time and try to find how to pay for a ticket especially with all of the Govt bureaucracy unless it is a serious violation and/or causes injury.

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