You didn't say if the ticket had to be about MBs so I'll relate this story: The city and county of Denver has a fender law. In other words, according to the books and the cops, you must have fenders on a car. The problem is that the law was written in 1957, and they call fenders 'wheel covers'. Now, any automotive enthusiast knows that 'wheel covers' refers to 'hub caps'; decorative covers that hide the ugly lug nuts on a automobile wheel. I haven't had a hot rod since I was 13 that had fenders, and I don't live in the city of Denver, but, I was ticketed one time by a Denver cop, back in the 80s for not having fenders on my car. I went to court armed with photocopied pages from parts catalogs from three automobile manufactures which showed, 'wheel covers'. I also had photos of my car, which the cop agreed was the one I was driving that day, which clearly showed I had spoked rims. Wheel covers, or hub caps can not be applied over spoked rims. The judge agreed and dismissed the case. And you want to know something else? Denver has never changed the wording of their law. It still calls fenders, 'wheel covers'. Ya gotta love those law makers who don't have a clue as to what they are writing laws about. Case in point: Colorado's new law which refers to our bikes as, 'Low Power Scooters'. The Bone heads.
Tom