Is Speed Camera Plan Really Safe?

SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS – When a suburban man with 60 traffic tickets smashed his Ferrari into another car, killing the driver, her 4-year-old son and himself in 2005, state and local officials responded by tightening loopholes in state traffic laws to make sure police and prosecutors have up-to-date information and can get problem drivers off the streets.

speed camera

But now, some local lawmakers and prosecutors fear those efforts could be undermined by the growing interest in letting cameras enforce speed limits.

The problem, some say, is those speed-camera tickets wouldn’t get reported to the state as long as the driver pays the $100 fine. As a result, drivers who normally would risk losing their licenses would keep driving.

“You can’t have a system where you have ticket after ticket and just pay a fine. There has to be some kind of reporting to the secretary of state,” said DuPage County State’s Attorney Joseph Birkett.

A plan pending in the state Senate would allow cities and villages to contract with camera companies to remotely issue speeding tickets.

DuPage County created a computer program designed to correlate driving records from Illinois’ 102 counties to prevent repeatedly ticketed drivers from qualifying for court supervision. The program was developed after the tragic 2005 crash in West Chicago that prompted outrage from the victim’s family and the public at how the speeding driver was able to keep his license so long.

Because speed-camera violators would not be reported to the secretary of state unless the driver failed to pay five speed-camera tickets, DuPage’s database would become far less useful, Birkett said.

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Hasty Driver Backs Over Police Car After Ticket

This is just plain funny!  –  A man who had been pulled over and ticketed by police ran backward up and onto a Buffalo Grove squad car, apparently in his haste to drive off.

Henry Raskin, 70, of Niles had been pulled over by a Buffalo Grove (Illinois) officer on the 400 block of Dundee Road around 11:30 a.m. Friday for driving 58 mph in a 35 mph zone, Sgt. Scott Kristiansen said. The officer wrote the ticket and returned to the car, and Raskin got ready to drive away. Except he went flying backward.

“(He) apparently was going to pull away at a high rate of speed, but the only problem was that he was in reverse,” Kristiansen said. He said Raskin was not happy about getting a ticket. He said police are reviewing the squad car videotape to see what Raskin might also be charged with.

Raskin was taken to Northwest Community Hospital in Arlington Heights as a precaution. Kristiansen said police don’t believe Raskin has any medical conditions that could have led to the crash. Raskin’s age also didn’t seem to play a factor, he said. The officer, a 20-year veteran of the Buffalo Grove department, was not injured, but his car will be out of service for a while. “He ended up with the left rear wheel of the car coming through his windshield, about 6 inches from his face,” Kristiansen said. “Luckily, he was not injured.” The squad car suffered significant damage to the front end, including the windshield and the hood.

Kristiansen said the police investigation so far shows the officer initiated the traffic stop properly. He said officers are trained to treat every stop as if it isn’t a routine procedure so that they are aware when unexpected circumstances like this one take place. “The officer stopped the car properly and positioned himself properly,” he said.

In Illinois, Letter Sent to Parents after Teens’ Speeding Ticket

Illinois State Police have a warning for teen drivers: Slow down or expect a letter sent home to mom and dad.

Illinois State Police SealTroopers in the Springfield district say they’re seeing more teens driving faster and getting into accidents. So they’re prepared to tell parents if their kids are pulled over for speeding. The reaction among teenagers is mixed with some saying they’d never tell parents they got a ticket. Other teens say they’d have to ask their parents to help pay the $75 fine, so they’d have to come forward.

State police say in the last few weeks they’ve pulled over teen drivers from Chatham and Springfield going as fast as 90 miles per hour on interstates. Last month four teens were killed on a rural Logan County road where speed is believed to be a factor. Teens say they know it’s not safe to drive fast, but it’s just now starting to sink in.

“I actually just got a speeding ticket, so it’s funny you ask me this. I didn’t realize the number one cause of fatality accidents is speeding I thought it was drunk driving,” said teen driver Rachel Wilson.

“Honestly it’s pretty easy for teenagers to get around telling their parents they’ve been stopped. A lot of the time, their parents will never know they’ve been stopped,” said Illinois State Police Trooper Christy Pullen.

State troopers say the letters will start going out April 1st, but only to parents in the Springfield area. So far the idea has not been expanded statewide, but a district in Northern Illinois is also trying out the idea.

There are some exceptions teens will have to be going 20 miles over the limit for a letter to ever be drafted.