Speed cameras : innocence not a defense in Maryland

AMonger

Veteran Expediter
Maryland: Innocence Not a Defense to Speed Camera Citation Judges in Prince Georges County, Maryland are cracking down on motorists who argue speed camera tickets are inaccurate.

Prince George's County, Maryland judges are tired of complaints that photo enforcement citations are inaccurate or otherwise invalid. To speed proceedings on "speed camera day" when automated citation cases are heard, at least one judge is cautioning motorists not to bother attempting to prove their innocence, regardless of the merit of their argument.

"This is a speed camera violation session," District Judge Jean S. Baron said on November 9. "The only defense the court is going to accept is if you were not the driver of the vehicle and you have the name and the address of the person who was driving and you present that to the court under oath, I will accept that as a defense. Please don't tell me that you know you couldn't have been going that fast or there's something wrong with the equipment."

Will Foreman, owner of Eastover Auto Supply, has infuriated local prosecutors by offering a mathematical proof that his delivery vehicles were incorrectly accused of speeding. He used the photographs taken by the speed camera vendor Optotraffic to create a time-distance calculation showing his vehicles could not possibly have traveled at the velocity alleged. To counter this, Optotraffic press spokesman Mickey E. Shepherd, who is not a scientist, would present evidence at trial that the camera equipment verifies its own accuracy.

"There's someone here from the jurisdiction who testifies that the equipment was calibrated and validated -- or it is self-calibrating -- then I'm not going to be able to accept that as a defense," Judge Baron said. "Keep that in mind. Now if you want to accept responsibility and enter a guilty plea, I will take that into consideration and in all probability I will give you a probation before judgment and greatly reduce the fine. Now that's up to you" (listen to the judge's full statement).

Foreman's concern about camera accuracy is echoed in correspondence between the town of Cheverly and Optotraffic. Cheverly this month stopped letting Optotraffic issue photo tickets and switched to Brekford, an upstart rival to the established players American Traffic Solutions (ATS) and Redflex Traffic Systems of Australia.

"Not only are the cameras still not functioning properly, they now are producing violations for invisible vehicles going 76 miles per hour and bicycles going 38 and 57 miles per hour and now violations with just a part of a vehicle in only one photo," Town Administrator David Warrington wrote in a July 26 letter to Optotraffic. "Finally, we continue to get false speed readings for vehicles that have an irregular size such as buses and trucks with ladder racks. Rather than have meeting to have Mickey tell us 'that it's technical' we would like you to have an explanation for the equipment problems provided to us in writing. I look forward to hearing from you in the next ten days."

On September 23, Judge Gerard F. Devlin prohibited Foreman from introducing the letter as evidence. Judge Devlin then took matters a step further by jailing James Bradford, 71, for contempt for saying "I was not speeding" after Devlin told him to stop repeating an argument he rejected (listen to the exchange in court).

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You know the problem with bad cops? They make the other 5% look bad.
 

nightcreacher

Veteran Expediter
speed cameras are just money grabber.no points follow the ticket,as they cant prove who was driving the car.If your car was being repaired and the mechanic goes thru a spped trap,you get the ticket.
Where I live,school zones are marked with flashing lights that notify you about the speed,except,I was told,after the fact,that the school zone i went thru ,with the lights off,that city school zones are from 7 am til 4 30 pm,i was doing 45 in a 45,that became 20 mph from 7am til 4 30 that day
100 dollars fine,took it to court,100 bucks plus 200 more for lawyer fees
 

AMonger

Veteran Expediter
Even if the judge finds you guilty you can appeal his decision.

Better check. In some places, it's treated differently. Either no appeal or one in which the rules are changed and the deck stacked. The rules of evidence are already stacked against the driver with a less stringent standard for conviction. And if it's treated like a parking ticket rather than a moving violation, likely no appeal will be allowed.
 

nightcreacher

Veteran Expediter
i tried to apeal,its treated like a parking ticket,couldnt apeal.the area i ent thru was a school zone,but the speed sign wasnt flashing.I was told,Akron and Cleveland ohio,all school zones from 7 30 am til 4 30 pm are 20 mph,flashing light or not.got not points ,just 100 buck fine
 

cranis

Expert Expediter
Driver
speed cameras are just money grabber.no points follow the ticket,as they cant prove who was driving the car.If your car was being repaired and the mechanic goes thru a spped trap,you get the ticket.
Where I live,school zones are marked with flashing lights that notify you about the speed,except,I was told,after the fact,that the school zone i went thru ,with the lights off,that city school zones are from 7 am til 4 30 pm,i was doing 45 in a 45,that became 20 mph from 7am til 4 30 that day
100 dollars fine,took it to court,100 bucks plus 200 more for lawyer fees
Yes some municipalities have this 'school zone' law they are 20-25. been warned a few times on this. also was given warning for flashing speed light in school zone, even tho school was not in for the day.
 
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