Monday, November 16, 2009

NJ adds Traffic Lights to Issue More Tickets

Camera Tickets, Fines, New Jersey, NJ, Ticket, Traffic Cameras, Traffic Tickets
NJ tickets will include an $85 fine. Failure to pay may include bench warrants and will be issued regardless of your address. In Newark, New Jersey there will be Traffic Cameras at the intersection of Market and Broad streets and at the intersection of Market Street and Raymond Boulevard to issue tickets for running red lights. The next 46 traffic cameras to be installed are in Wayne, Morris Township and Hoboken.

The State of New Jersey offered cameras to all its towns, that's a possible 12,000 traffic lights. New Jersey has dictated how the money will be split:
state gets $11.50; the county gets $27.50; the town gets $46 to be shared with the installer. The NJ DOT requires all other efforts have been exhausted to solve the problems at the intersections before allowing the traffic cameras to be installed. Some areas didn't have documentation to prove that so they were denied the new traffic cameras. New Jersey says it is only allowing DOT to adjust the timing at the intersections. The State of New Jersey believes that the increase in rear-end collisions at intersections with traffic cameras will decrease once the public is used to the traffic cameras.

http://www.northjersey.com

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Wednesday, March 29, 2006

Police Catch Speeding Lamborghini


wnbc.com - Police Nab Speeding Lamborghini
NORTH BRUNSWICK, N.J. -- Slow and steady -- and poor gas mileage -- ruled the day when North Brunswick police captured a speeding Lamborghini.
An officer gave chase after clocking the 2006 V-10 Gallardo going 85 mph Tuesday on Route 1. The sports car pulled away as the officer's Ford Crown Victoria patrol car reached 100 mph. The officer broke off the chase and broadcast a description of the car with Massachusetts license plates ...

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Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Email Warns of Dallas Texas Speed Traps is Hoax

Star-Telegram 01/22/2006 Questionable e-mail warns of speed traps
Questionable e-mail warns of speed trapsBy Traci ShurleyStar-Telegram Staff WriterThe caution it urges might not be a bad idea, but an e-mail describing a "speeding ticket frenzy" in the Metroplex smells like a hoax.
The message popped up in inboxes last week. It warns that the Dallas Police Department and the Texas Department of Public Safety are launching a 30-day crackdown on speeders, with extra troopers and officers expected to generate $9 million in fines. Familiar freeways like Interstate 20 and Texas 360 are listed as targets.
That would be news to Sgt. Gil Cerda, a Dallas police spokesman.
"I heard about it yesterday. But I don't know anything about any speeding-ticket frenzy," Cerda said Saturday.
A Web site devoted to urban myths, www.snopes.com, says that nearly identical e-mails have circulated in California, New Jersey and Tennessee since May.

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