
...in Will's car

Moderator: Mike Simanyi
Jeff Shyu wrote:i haven't personally come up against a red-light camera before, but I imagine it to be easy to get out of.
they can't prove that you were the one driving the car, and they can't prove that the camera didn't malfunction and take the picture at the wrong time.
you have a right to face your accused, and i just don't see how the court can produce a witness in this case.
Chad Stubblefield wrote:didnt they make a spray that made the plate really shinny and created an over exposed result? }:)
The accuser is the state via the camera. So, you can contest it, of course, but depending on the jurisdiction, you might have to physically be there. Kansas is probably one of them.Jeff Shyu wrote:i haven't personally come up against a red-light camera before, but I imagine it to be easy to get out of.
they can't prove that you were the one driving the car, and they can't prove that the camera didn't malfunction and take the picture at the wrong time.
you have a right to face your accused, and i just don't see how the court can produce a witness in this case.
I got popped in San Bernardino on a right turn on red. They had a picture of me, the car and a plate number and to top it off, full video of the entire encounter. I maybe tapped the brakes and down-shifted to make the corner. I thought of fighting it on the pictures, but the video was too much to fight.Jeff Shyu wrote:i haven't personally come up against a red-light camera before, but I imagine it to be easy to get out of.
they can't prove that you were the one driving the car, and they can't prove that the camera didn't malfunction and take the picture at the wrong time.
you have a right to face your accused, and i just don't see how the court can produce a witness in this case.
It shows me totally blowing the light with no one around. If I hadn't have hit the brakes at the last second knowing I was going into a 25 zone, I woulda made itJeff Shyu wrote:how far does the picture show?
remember the spirit of the law vs. the word of the law.
proof that it was totally safe!Curt Luther wrote:It shows me totally blowing the light with no one around. If I hadn't have hit the brakes at the last second knowing I was going into a 25 zone, I woulda made itJeff Shyu wrote:how far does the picture show?
remember the spirit of the law vs. the word of the law.
Cutting down on t-bone accidents can be accomplished with overlapping red lights, ie, every direction sees a red light for 1 second before the next green cycle.Steve Ekstrand wrote:I read a study, I think quoted in autoweek that said that intersections with red light cameras experience something like a 300-400% increase in total accidents. However it was basically a net wash in medical treatment. The rearenders are more frequent, but less injury prone than the t-bones.
What bugs me is that in jurisdictions serviced by red light camera vendors, the yellow light times are ALWAYS shortened to make the lights "more effective". That is to say, better at achieving revenue goals.
Well, there's the rub. A system based on safety without regard to enforcing a law at 105% just isn't the revenue generatorSteve Ekstrand wrote:How much revenue does that raise???
I beat a red light ticket once using a short yellow light defense. The cop testified that I was about 10 feet behind the limit line when the light turned red. I calculated feet per second at the speed limit and testified that if the yellow had been timed properly, I would have been 10 feet into the intersection when the light turned red. He referred to a chart he had in front of him, then agreed with me. Case dismissed. Somewhere there is a chart that spells it all out. I'd like to get my hands on one.Steve Ekstrand wrote:What bugs me is that in jurisdictions serviced by red light camera vendors, the yellow light times are ALWAYS shortened to make the lights "more effective". That is to say, better at achieving revenue goals.
"Somewhere over the rainbow...." Don't expect it from someplace that would otherwise make $$$ from you. The system is stacked against you and was created to generate income, not identify who is legal/not. That's why you're always better off fighting a ticket, regardless whether you're guilty. Don't get me started.Somewhere there is a chart that spells it all out. I'd like to get my hands on one.
lacking that, it can't be that hard to take down the time of the yellow light at the camera intersection, vs. the ones before and after it. if the yellow is shorter, it would seem an obvious win?George Schilling wrote:Somewhere there is a chart that spells it all out. I'd like to get my hands on one.