Image Credit: Coral Springs Public Safety / YouTube.Every so often a traffic stop video comes along that has a little bit of everything for car folks. Speed, a legendary meme excuse, an insurance mystery, and a driver's ed refresher course delivered curbside by a very patient officer. This one, out of Coral Springs, checks every box.The stop starts simple enough. Officer Charnie with Coral Springs Police pulls a driver over for doing 68 in a 45 zone, which is not a small gap by anyone's math. Her explanation, though, is the kind of line that could only come from someone who actually knows cars. She tells the officer her "thing was on Sport Mode," and when she caught herself accelerating harder than intended, she dropped the classic line: "the VTEC kicked in." For anyone who has spent time around Honda forums or car meme culture, you know exactly why viewers were losing it over this one.Things get more complicated once the officer runs the plate. The car belongs to her boyfriend, and it comes back with what's called a seized tag order attached to it, essentially a flag that tells the officer the state wants that license plate back. The officer explains on camera that these orders can come from a handful of different sources: unpaid insurance, unpaid tolls, an old parking ticket that never got resolved, or even unpaid child support. From the roadside, an officer only sees that the flag exists, not the reason behind it. As he puts it, they can see the cover of the book, but not what's written inside.AdvertisementAdvertisementSo the investigation shifts to insurance. The boyfriend gets on the phone, insists he is current, and sends over a photo of the insurance card. The officer's partner checks the policy number against the VIN and confirms it lines up, with coverage dates matching. No citation for lack of insurance, since the proof is right there on the phone.The Real Issue Turns Out to Be the Learner's PermitWhile all that insurance back and forth is happening, the officer notices something else. The driver only has a learner's permit, and Florida requires anyone driving on one to have a licensed passenger who is at least 21 years old sitting in the front seat, regardless of the driver's own age. She's 18 and driving solo, which is a violation no matter how mature or capable a driver might be.Cutting a Break Instead of Calling a Tow TruckTechnically, the officer could have had the car towed on the spot.Instead, since they were already sitting in a parking lot, he let her park the car there and call someone for a ride, rather than adding a tow to an already rough afternoon.Two Citations, Three Ways to Handle ThemShe walks away with two citations, one for speeding and one for the learner's permit violation. The officer lays out her options clearly: pay the fines, take an online traffic school course to avoid points, or fight it in traffic court.AdvertisementAdvertisementShe has 30 days to pick a lane.If you want more stories like this, follow Guessing Headlights on Yahoo so you don't miss what's coming next.