April 19, 2026

Judge Rejects Attempt to Move Weehawken Traffic Case to Federal Court, Cites Lack of Jurisdiction

NEWARK, N.J. — A federal judge dismissed an attempt to transfer a Weehawken traffic case into federal court, ruling that municipal ticket matters cannot be reviewed at the federal level.

U.S. District Judge Julien X. Neals denied the filing by Latisha Shrise Conover Bey, who sought to remove her municipal court case tied to a motor vehicle infraction issued in April 2024.

Traffic cases not eligible for federal review

The court found that traffic citations handled in municipal court are not considered “civil actions” under federal law and therefore cannot be removed to federal court.

Legal precedent consistently holds that federal courts lack jurisdiction over local traffic matters, including citations and related municipal violations.

As a result, the judge concluded the case could not proceed in federal court regardless of the claims raised.

Plaintiff raised constitutional and sovereignty arguments

In her filing, Bey appeared to challenge the municipal proceedings on constitutional grounds and also referenced her status as a “Moorish American National” as part of her argument for federal jurisdiction.

The court rejected those claims, noting that similar arguments have been repeatedly dismissed by courts and do not provide a valid basis for federal review.

Limits on federal court authority emphasized

The ruling also pointed out that federal courts cannot act as appellate bodies for state or municipal court decisions, reinforcing long-standing jurisdictional limits.

Even when constitutional issues are raised, cases must originate in a way that gives federal courts proper authority to hear them—something the judge found lacking here.

Key Points
• Federal judge dismissed effort to move Weehawken traffic case to federal court
• Court ruled traffic citations are not eligible for federal jurisdiction
• Sovereignty and constitutional arguments did not establish legal basis

Broader pattern in similar filings

The decision aligns with numerous prior rulings across the country rejecting attempts to remove traffic or municipal cases to federal court.

Courts have consistently ruled that such matters remain within state and local jurisdiction unless specific federal legal thresholds are met.

Current status

The case has been dismissed at the federal level, leaving the underlying municipal court matter in place and outside federal review.