
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/08/16/earlyshow/living/main636197.shtml
(Watch
Video)
WASHINGTON,
Aug. 16,
2004
Busted
For Speeding
On Camera?
(CBS)
Every
year,
millions
of motorists
across
the country
are busted
by an
invisible
big brother-
the hundreds
of cameras
that are
set up
to catch
speeders
and people
who drive
through
red lights.
Now,
there
is a product
that claims
to level
the playing
field.
The
speed
trap could
have nabbed
any mommy-mobile
cruising
through
Washington
that June
morning.
It got
CBS New
Correspondent
Joie Chen.
But
she didn't
even know
she'd
gotten
her first
speeding
ticket,
until
it came
in the
mail nearly
three
weeks
later.
She
was caught
in the
act by
one of
the hundreds
of radar
cameras
used by
police
around
the country.
Besides
the District
of Columbia,
where
she had
her run-in,
18 states
have found
speeding
and red-light
cameras
save lives,
and manpower,
while
generating
big revenues.
Such
states
are:
* District
of Columbia
* New
York
* Maryland
* California
* Virginia
* Arizona
* Colorado
* Delaware
* Georgia
* Illinois
* North
Carolina
* Ohio
* Oregon
* Rhode
Island
* Texas
* South
Dakota
* Tennessee
* Washington
* New
Mexico
In
D.C.,
red-light
runners
and speeders
caught
on camera
have paid
more than
$80 million
in fines
since
the flashes
started
going
off five
years
ago, but
police
insist
it's not
about
the money.
Inspector
Kevin
Keegan
of the
DC Metropolitan
Police
Department
says,
“It's
about
safety.
Nobody
wants
to hurt
anybody
or have
a relative
hurt and
that's
what we're
talking
about
here.”
And
face it,
drivers
speed.
At a particular
Washington
spot,
where
a camera
is installed,
six cars
went by
in just
19 seconds.
Five of
them will
get tickets
in the
mail.
That's
at least
$250 in
fines,
in less
than 20
seconds!
Everyone's
got a
story.
Christina
Lobo of
Bethesda,
Md., says,
“Me
and my
husband
have already
gotten
several
tickets
when we
weren't
really
speeding.”
And
everyone
seems
to have
someone
at home
who's
always
getting
caught.
Mike
Jones
of Capitol
Heights,
Md., says
about
a relative,
“She’s
gotten
over $1,200
of tickets,
at least.
I mean
she just
runs through
the lights,
and the
lights
just FLASH.”
So
they're
trying
a product
that claims
to thwart
the cameras.
The
idea is
to make
the license
tag glossy
- so shiny
that it
reflects
the radar
camera's
flash.
The
cops say
it doesn't
work.
But an
auto shop
has sold
more than
700 cans,
and only
four drivers
have called
to complain.
In
an unscientific
experiment,
Chen tried
it on
a CBS
staffer's
tag and
tried
to reproduce
the flash
with a
Polaroid
camera.
The
glare
seemed
worse
at some
angles.
But it's
hard to
tell whether
any speeders
would
be spared.
Other
products,
like covers
that slip
over the
license
tag, are
illegal.
But dealers
insist
this stuff
is fine.
Will
Foreman
of the
Eastover
Auto Supply
says,
“How
can they
outlaw
something
making
their
license
plate
clean
and glossy?
Are they
going
to make
it illegal
to wax
your car?
Maybe.
D.C. police
says spraying
tags amounts
to defacing
government
property.
Chen didn't
try it.
She figured,
she’s
in enough
trouble
already.
So far there are no specific
laws that make these kinds of products illegal.
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