FC: Denver judge says yep, photo radar program is bad news

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Wed May 22 2002 - 22:38:30 PDT

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    From: "Diamond, Richard" <Richard.Diamondat_private>
    Subject: Denver photo radar ban upheld on appeal
    Date: Tue, 21 May 2002 10:39:02 -0400
    
    I. A District Court judge has rejected the City of Denver's appeal to a 
    County Judge Mary Celeste's finding that Denver's photo radar program was 
    illegal.
    
    II. In the UK, hundreds of photo radar cameras will be removed because they 
    were placed in locations where there is no safety problem, but high revenue 
    potential (sound familiar?)  Of course, this doesn't mean they'll refund 
    any of the 600,000 tickets issued in the past 12 months, nor do they 
    forecast any decline in tickets -- they actually hope to reach 3 million 
    annual citations by 2004.
    
    III. In South Australia, cameras haven't reduced traffic fatalities at all, 
    but apparently the mobile speed camera cars are themselves quite a safety 
    hazard.
    
    Details on the items above appear below:
    
    Richard Diamond
    Office of the Majority Leader
    U.S. House of Representatives
    202-225-6007 / www.freedom.gov
    
    I. DENVER
    
    Judge Celeste's original ruling:
    <http://www.freedom.gov/auto/cases/denver.pdf>http://www.freedom.gov/auto/cases/denver.pdf 
    (3mb PDF format)
    
      Associated Press. May 21, 2002, Tuesday, BC cycle
    
    DENVER -- A District Court judge has dismissed the city's appeal of a 
    county court's ruling that declared Denver's photo-radar program illegal.
    
    District Judge Joseph Meyer said in a ruling issued Friday that the city 
    can only appeal county court rulings dismissing traffic tickets when a 
    statute is declared unconstitutional or unenforceable. Assistant City 
    Attorney Scott Johnson said the city hasn't decided whether to appeal 
    Meyer's ruling.
    
    Denver suspended photo radar after County Judge Mary Celeste ruled in 
    January that it was illegal because tickets were not issued by police. A 
    private contractor prepared and sent the summonses.
    [...]
    
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    II. THE UK
    <http://www.dailymail.co.uk/>http://www.dailymail.co.uk/
    DAILY MAIL (London) May 21, 2002
    RAY MASSEY, HUNDREDS OF SPEED CAMERAS TO BE SCAPPED
    
    HUNDREDS of hidden speed cameras are to be ripped out in a victory for 
    motorists and fair play.
    
    In future they must be installed only at accident blackspots, not where 
    they can trap the most drivers.
    
    Police will be banned from hiding them behind trees, hedges, lamp-posts and 
    road signs. There must also be clear advance warning, giving drivers time 
    to slow down. The new Government guidelines are a sharp change of policy. 
    It has been prompted by recognition that badly-sited or deliberately hidden 
    speed traps are undermining support for the 'cash for cameras' safety scheme.
    
    This lets police keep some of the fines produced by installing extra 
    cameras, which are supposed to be painted yellow and easy to see.
    
    But some police forces have failed to stick to the rules, triggering 
    mounting fury among drivers who are paying GBP 25million a year in speeding 
    fines - double the level of five years ago.
    [...]
    
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    III. SOUTH AUSTRALIA
    
    <http://www.theadvertiser.news.com.au/>http://www.theadvertiser.news.com.au/
    
    Fatalities so far this year: 50. Fatalities to the same time last year: 
    50.  I.e., no reduction in fatalities, despite their camera program.  The 
    speed camera cars themselves, however, appear to be quite a safety hazard, 
    causing three separate accidents in one day:
    
    The Advertiser
    May 20, 2002, Monday
    Speed-camera car hit
    A SPEED-camera car sustained panel damage when it was sideswiped by a 
    Volkswagen beetle in Eastwood last night. The red Holden commodore sedan 
    was parked on the northern side of Glen Osmond Rd when the beetle hit its 
    rear driver's side about 9.50pm.
    
    The light-coloured beetle did not stop. The male occupant of the commodore 
    was not injured.
    
    Two other speed-camera cars were involved in minor accidents yesterday - 
    one outside the Festival Centre in the city, and one at the intersection of 
    Payneham Rd and Fullarton Rd, Norwood.
    
    
    
    
    
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