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, November 11, 2009

Cameras Increase Crashes and Injuries

Camera Tickets, Civil Fines, Florida, Ticket, Traffic School, Traffic TicketsMultiple year studies of three cities resulted in consistent findings:
"comprehensive studies conclude cameras actually increase crashes and injuries"

Traffic Light Cameras violate a 2005 ruling of the Florida Attorney General.

A preliminary view of Temple Terrace data suggests "the number of accidents more than doubled" at intersections with cameras.

Source:
Florida Red Light Cameras - Attorney Investigates - Scientific Report
http://www.thenewspaper.com/rlc/docs/2009/tx-templereport.pdf

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Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Lawsuit Files against Traffic Cameras in Temple Terrace

Camera Tickets, Civil Fines, Florida, Fines, Ticket, Traffic Tickets, Traffic SchoolThe lawsuits makes allegations that the Traffic Cameras that the City of Temple Terrace allows American Traffic Solutions (ATS) to operate are in direct violation of a 2005 ruling of the then Florida Attorney General Charlie Crist.

Sources:
http://www.thenewspaper.com

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Friday, November 06, 2009

New Traffic Cameras

Camera Tickets, Civil Fines, Traffic Tickets, Traffic School, TicketNew Traffic Cameras have been installed everywhere. I sat and watched several intersections recently. I noticed that many cameras are aimed at the right turn lane. The camera's flash is triggered when a cars front wheel crosses the white line at the intersection. This trigger not only takes a still photo of the license plate on the back of the car but I have read that there is a video that begins recording at that moment and continues for a pre-determined amount of time. The videos and still are then processed at the camera company and often re-processed at the individual policing agency that issues the ticket. I was surprised that so much emphasis has been put on the right hand lane. As I sat and watched many, many vehicles triggered the cameras. They seemed to come to a complete stop on or just beyond thee painted stripe. Be very careful to stop before the stripe. If you do not, I suggest not commencing through the red light. Stay right where you are until you clearly have a green light. That way as the video is viewed there will be no question that you had run the light since you in fact stayed until it was green.

If you received a traffic ticket, would like to reduce the points on your driving record, would like to reduce your insurance premiums, or would simply like to become a better driver by learning about current traffic laws - take an online course with e State Traffic School.
eStateTrafficSchool.com

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Monday, July 13, 2009

Speed Cameras Being Fooled by Cloned Plates

speed camera pimping game ticketsIn Maryland Students make fake plates, speed through intersections, then the Photo Enforcement Devices mail tickets to the owners of the plates. In England this is referred to as plate cloning. The Maryland students call it the "speed camera pimping game."

Source: Local teens claim pranks on countys Speed Cams (Montgomery County Sentinel)

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Sunday, June 28, 2009

New Pasadena Speed Traps

Pasadena Speed TrapsCalifornia Senate approved for Pasadena to lower the speed limit disregarding engineering safety studies just to provide revenue by producing more speeding tickets! California Assembly Bill 564 (PDF) (The state Assembly voted by a 51-17 to allow Pasadena to establish Speeding Traps in May, 2009.)

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Sunday, June 14, 2009

GPS amd Software help avoid Speed Traps and Tickets

speeding ticketDevice helps you dodge tickets - legally. PhantomAlert software which pairs
with your already existing GPS system alerts you to speed traps, cameras and
red lights for a monthly service fee.

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Thursday, May 14, 2009

GPS Traffic Camera Locator

GPS traffic camera locator
Cobra Electronics now has a stand-alone “GPS traffic camera locator” the SL3 – GPS Safety Camera Locator with AURA. Cobra says that this device warms drivers of "driving threats" including red lights, speed cameras and caution areas.

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Sunday, December 21, 2008

Get Speed Trap Alerts on your Cell Phone

Speed Traps Traffic School for Speeding Tickets
This may be worth a look. Most speeding tickets are over $300.00
Anything to avoid being stopped may be worth a look.

At http://www.trapster.com/ you can sign up for free to get Speed Trap alerts on your Cell Phone or GPS device. Trapster® users share the location of police speed traps by simply clicking their mobile phones. It uses your phone's GPS and Internet to alert you as you approach reported traps

From their website:
"If you are concerned you should probably check the laws in your state or country, but our lawyers don't think so. In fact, the police we've spoken with actually like the idea. It beeps, people slow down, they have met their objective, you save money on the ticket and insurance, and everyone is happy. The police can always find plenty of other people to issue violations to. People who don't use Trapster®, that is."

It is currently available for:
iPhone 3G, BlackBerry, Nokia s60 (N95 and similar) or other unlocked Java/J2ME phone, or Windows Mobile, Garmin, TomTom, or Dash Express.

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Monday, December 08, 2008

iPhone Applications for Speed Traps

Avoid Speed Traps
There are now at least two iPhone Applications for Speed Traps: Trapster a free application and NMobile available through iTunes. NMobile has a much better application but Trapster has more users and thus more information. So at this time Trapster might be a better bet. Check out both to make your decision.

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Monday, December 01, 2008

Good News Is No Speed Traps / Bad News Is Parking Tickets Up 42 Percent in Manhattan

Good News / Bad News in NY City
Good news is no Speed Traps. Bad news is parking tickets up 42 percent in Manhattan since Michael Bloomberg became mayor. YIKES! City officials say traffic enforcement agent don't have quotas, just "goals." I guess that is how the big city says welcome.

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Tuesday, January 29, 2008

North Carolina Police say 'speed traps' just an excuse ticketed speeders use

North Carolina police say that speeders just use "speed trap" as an excuse for getting a ticket. To read more:
http://www.gastongazette.com/news/speed_16050___article.html/speeding_arndt.html

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Saturday, January 12, 2008

Racecar Driver Gives California Driving Tips

Get California driving tips from a racecar driver in this 2 minute video courtesy of http://eStateTrafficSchool.com. Includes information about what to do when pulled over by a police officer and where to go for help after you get the ticket!

Racecar Driver Gives California Driving Tips

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Friday, January 11, 2008

New Technology in Radar Detectors Help Speeders Slow Down

The Bel STi Driver, Cobra XRS-R9G, Escort Passport 9500i, and Valentine One, use new technology to improve their performance. Beltronics claims that its the Beltronics Bel STi Driver with TotalShield technology will make the driver completely invisible. The Cobra and Escort models are using global positioning system (GPS) technology to for more accurate of radar detection. They can distinguish between radar and what is likely a microwave, automatic door or keyfob. The Valentine One has two radar detectors and two laser antennas. Each is always looking forward and backwards simultaneously.

New Technology in Radar Detectors Help Speeders Slow Down

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Thursday, January 10, 2008

Watch Speeders on truTV Channel

The change from Court TV to truTV brings a new show "Speeders." The show rides along with many different law enforcement officers as they write various traffic tickets, especially Speeding Tickets. The new shows air each week on Thursday at 8pm Eastern or watch it online. The show often highlights the humorous side of getting tickets.

Watch other Speeders get Tickets Online or on TruTV

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Thursday, December 20, 2007

Traffic School

Check estatetrafficschool.com for funny classes!

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Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Frustrated officers say Hillsborough's traffic court has become gridlocked

Traffic cases force police to sit, wait
Frustrated officers say Hillsborough's traffic court has become gridlocked.
By COLLEEN JENKINS AND REBECCA CATALANELLO, Times Staff Writers
Published August 26, 2007
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TAMPA - There's a four-letter word that describes Hillsborough County's traffic court these days.

"A mess," Tampa police Chief Stephen Hogue says.

"Just a mess," Chief Judge Manuel Menendez echoes.

The number of traffic tickets has swelled 52 percent in five years, to 272,511 last year. Court dockets are crammed with speeders and red light runners.

Law enforcement leaders and judges have been struggling to find a mutually agreeable remedy. The result has been a gridlock of unhappy uniformed officers, lawyers and citizens at the once-a-week County Court traffic hearings in Courtroom 302.

Thursday's docket, considered light at 454 cases, forced Officer Larry Yeoman to cut his night's sleep short to attend morning court, then kept him away from his South Tampa patrol area for three hours of his late-afternoon shift.

Fellow officers came to court on their day off, racking up guaranteed hours of overtime no matter how long they stayed or whether they even testified.

Most left frustrated

"Please do something for us," begged a deputy who left court after more than two hours.

County Judge Raul "Sonny" Palomino Jr. thought he had the answer.

When he took over traffic court a year ago, he noticed that officers and lawyers often agreed about how a case should be resolved before it ever came before him. So he created a form that allowed the two sides to consent to a plea and get the officer out of court quickly.

Hogue was taken aback when he heard about the plea form this spring.

He supported the quickened pace of the docket but didn't like the idea of his officers recommending that the judge settle for a lesser penalty or no finding of guilt on a traffic charge.

"You're going to write a ticket to somebody, then you're going to say, 'Okay, withhold it?' " Hogue said. "We had no idea this was going on."

On May 30, the police chief issued a memo prohibiting officers from signing plea agreements in traffic court. Then the Hillsborough Sheriff's Office used almost exactly the same language in its own memo June 1, followed by one from the Florida Highway Patrol on June 22.

The edicts prescribed that officers, deputies and troopers "must not be a party to any written plea agreement or orally state in court an opinion as to the appropriate disposition of a traffic case to include withholding adjudication, recommending court costs or any other sanctions. That responsibility rests solely with the presiding judge."

Hogue and sheriff's officials met with Palomino to share their concerns.

The judge took it to heart, somewhat testily.

When a deputy tried to recommend an enhanced penalty on Thursday, Palomino cut him short and reminded him of the new edict.

"They told me, 'My deputies won't tell you how to sentence, you don't tell us how to charge,' " Palomino said.

The deputy looked sheepish. "Wow," someone whispered.

Since the memos, officers are back to sitting in court and waiting -- sometimes all day.

The 454 cases before Palomino Thursday included 207 from Tampa police, 179 from the Sheriff's Office and 59 from the Florida Highway Patrol. A blur of navy, forest green and tan uniforms squeezed into benches, jury seats and aisles, spilled out of the courtroom and forced members of the public to wait outside until their cases were called.

"This place gets worse and worse," a lawyer muttered as he pushed his way to an open space.

Officers have to be there or else their case is automatically dismissed. So just showing up will often prompt a "no contest" plea from a defendant who hoped the officer wouldn't make it.

As the hours dragged on, one officer likened getting his cases called to winning the lottery. Another's phone rang with a text message from a colleague sitting across the crowded room.

This s---s, it read.

Local traffic lawyers might not put it quite that way, but those contacted by the Times seem to share the sentiment.

They argue against Hogue's rule, saying the officer who wrote the ticket and saw the driver's demeanor should have a say about a suitable punishment.

They believe the judge is now convicting more drivers, and suspect that the police chief and Hillsborough Sheriff David Gee are behind it. Fines are collected only when someone is found guilty, they point out.

"They're treating traffic tickets like somebody robbed a bank," attorney Ty Trayner said. "They're just traffic tickets."

But law enforcement leaders said the revenue that comes to their agencies from tickets is hardly worth discussing.

"Traffic citations are not anything that anyone makes money on," Hogue said.

On average, Tampa takes in about $14 for every ticket written, he said. That doesn't even pay for the 20 to 25 minutes it takes to write them, he said.

Highway Patrol Maj. Thomas Knight said it's about ethics, not money.

Attorney backlash

On Aug. 9, Palomino went away to a conference.

Lawyers knew it, and some sought to add about six months' worth of motions to that day's calendar. Nine lawyers persuaded Senior Judge Elvin Martinez to dismiss nearly 900 tickets that had legal defects.

Of those, about 700 belonged to attorney Dennis Lopez, according to court records.

"It sounds like a high number, but it's just a small percentage of my cases," Lopez said. And they were motions that "would normally get granted in due course."

Even before the late additions, the docket had bulged with 400 cases. Court lasted until 10:30 p.m., said Carla Snavely, chief deputy of courts for the clerk's office.

On Friday, Palomino said he knew nothing about it.

Clocking overtime

Many officers reporting to court are off duty. Union contracts allow them to collect a minimum of overtime pay for time spent in court on their days off. Even if court takes just 15 minutes, the officer is entitled to three hours overtime with the Tampa police, 2 1/2 hours with the Highway Patrol or two hours with the Sheriff's Office.

Could that be an incentive for bosses, who already are paying for officers to sit in court, to make sure they're getting their money's worth?

Leaders in each agency said the overtime factor had nothing to do with their decision to ban officers from participating in the plea agreements.

In fact, Hogue says his moratorium has increased overtime. "This is costing us more money, no question about it."

As for the on-duty officers, there's an equally worrisome issue: "Obviously, if they're in court testifying, they're not on the road," said sheriff's Col. Greg Brown.

It's hard to get solid numbers showing the financial impact traffic court has had on overtime pay and on street patrols. All of the agencies said they track overtime claimed for court duty, but they don't differentiate between traffic court and criminal court.

Still, Maj. John Bennett, head of special operations, which includes the police traffic division, said he knows anecdotally that officers are spending more time sitting in court than ever before.

"We shouldn't have to live at the courthouse on our days off," said Kevin Durkin, president of the West Central Florida Police Benevolent Association. "It's frustrating to sit in court all day and never testify - whether you're getting overtime or not. It's boring."

So, are the streets less safe with all those cops tied up in court? Agency leaders say that, so far, they're handling the demand.

In Tampa, crash figures continue to be down over last year, according to the police. April and May accidents were down 26 and 22 percent, respectively.

But the drop has been less dramatic in the two months since Hogue issued his memo. In June, crashes were down 21 percent. In July, the drop was 17 percent.

Solutions

Palomino, who jokes that his docket could fill a convention room, has gotten some relief. More is on the way.

A hearing officer, who already had been handling some traffic cases during the week, began holding night traffic court every other Thursday this summer.

And starting Sept. 4, County Judge Joelle Ann Ober will take over half of Palomino's docket, holding traffic court each Tuesday and possibly another day if needed, Menendez said.

Officials also will stagger hearing times. Instead of everyone on Palomino's morning docket showing up at 8:30 a.m., some will be asked to arrive at 10 a.m.

"We've got to get people in and out," Menendez said.

Pinellas County holds traffic court every day in two places, plus night court in two locations on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. And the caseload is smaller than in Hillsborough: 203,000 civil and criminal traffic citations last year.

An understatement

Remember Officer Yeoman, coming to court Thursday morning on three hours sleep?

The clock read 5:04 p.m. when Palomino called the final case, a speeding ticket Yeoman wrote. The lawyer quickly entered a no-contest plea, and the judge withheld adjudication. Yeoman didn't have to say a word.

Walking to his patrol car -- home away from home until shift's end at 1:30 a.m. -- the still good-natured officer uttered this understatement: "It makes for a very long day."

Staff photographer Ken Helle contributed to this report. Rebecca Catalanello can be reached at 813 226-3383 or rcatalanello@sptimes.com.

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