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http://www.news14charlotte.com/content/local_news/mecklenburg/?SecID=3&ArID=60393
Devices
claim
to
deceive
cameras
4/14/2004
7:17
PM
By:
Anjanette
Flowers,
News
14
Carolina
Click
here
to
Play
TV
report.
CHARLOTTE,
N.C.
--
Speed
cameras
will
soon
be
monitoring
how
fast
people
drive
on
some
Charlotte
roads.
The
cameras
take
a
picture
of
a
speeding
car’s
license
plate
so
that
police
know
where
to
send
the
$50
fine.
But
some
people
have
found
a
way
to
get
around
the
new
technology.
Some
Web
sites
are
offering
shields,
sprays
or
reflectors
that
supposedly
make
license
tags
unreadable
when
the
camera
flashes.
Capt.
Dave
Haggist
of
the
Charlotte-Mecklenburg
Police
Department
said
that
people
who
are
caught
with
such
a
device
will
be
penalized
much
more
than
$50.
"If
anyone
does
anything
to
obscure
their
license
plate,
something
an
officer
could
readily
see,
that's
a
violation
of
a
statute,”
Haggist
said.
“And
of
course,
they
will
be
subject
to
a
$125
fine."
Haggist
said
officers
can
only
enforce
what
they
see
with
the
naked
eye,
however.
"They
cannot
enforce
something
where
they
cannot
say,
‘Hey,
they're
trying
to
conceal
that
tag,’"
he
said.
Driver
Sean
Tohill
said
he
has
seen
the
phantom
plates
before,
but
he
is
not
convinced
they
actually
work.
"I
heard
they
really
don't
work
because
they
have
the
same
thing
in
England,
security
cameras
on
the
street
corner,
and
they
can
see
through
everything,"
Tohill
said.
“It’s
a
waste
of
money.”
There
are
thousands
who
disagree
with
Tohill
and
have
ordered
the
products,
which
cost
anywhere
from
$20
to
$30
each.
Some
drivers
say
it
a
price
worth
paying
to
avoid
a
$50
ticket.
Others
say
they
will
skip
the
devices
and
just
obey
the
speed
limit.
"I
have
no
reason
to
cover
up
my
license
plate,”
driver
Nancy
Yemm
said.
Speed
cameras
in
Charlotte
are
expected
to
be
up
and
running
by
early
June.
The
CMPD
will
have
30
trained
officers
manning
the
cameras
on
14
different
roads.
For
a
list
of
those
roads,
and
the
full
legislation,
click
here.
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