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| The speed trap set by your neighbour |
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| Written by Vascoingles | |
| Monday, 24 November 2008 | |
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The speed trap set by your neighbour - police recruit residents in road safety war On watch: A speed trap volunteer in action whereby anyone caught going over the speed limit will be contacted later by the police
The new guidelines may also allow volunteer groups to use portable cameras as well as radar equipment. One aspect of the scheme likely to be attractive to police chiefs is that the cost will not come out of their budgets. Each scheme will cost around £2,000 to set up, a price that includes detection equipment, signs to warn drivers that they are being watched, and high-visibility jackets. The groups will be expected to have at least six adult members, and organise their own finance. They are likely to be subsidised by local councils. Police officers – or a community police officer – are involved in picking out suitable roadside sites. The police also send the letters to drivers accused of speeding. Nigel Humphries of the Association of British Drivers predicted the plans would only promote conflict and farce. 'This is really not a very wise thing,' he said. 'I would like to see a national framework based on scrapping them altogether. In all the areas where they have been trialled we have seen a situation in which those operating the cameras have found themselves pointing the guns at their friends and neighbours and vice versa. They soon discover that the speeder is not some mysterious person passing through the village.' At present, the volunteer schemes do not provide evidence to support prosecutions, and the new Acpo guidelines are unlikely to suggest a change. However there are fears among motoring organisations that in future amateur speed cops may be able to bring prosecutions. Mike Morgan, of Pepipoo.com, a group that supports drivers in speeding cases, said: 'Having volunteers do the job of regular policemen, then raking in the money from the fines, might well be on the Christmas wish list of Acpo and its members.' Trial speed watch schemes have so far been open to anyone who wishes to take part. Few attempts appear to have been made to weed out undesirable volunteers, for example those with criminal records. One of the first forces to try civilian volunteers was Cambridgeshire. But it was forced to scrap the idea within weeks after opposition from a group of villagers. Company director Salli Roskilly decided to launch a petition against the initiative after it divided residents in her village of Fowlmere, near Royston. She said: 'The final straw was when I walked by one morning and saw that they had schoolchildren on the cameras. I am the last to condone speeding but there is a question of civil liberties. 'None of us wants a society where we are spying on each other. There has never been a fatal accident here and I just could not see the justification for it.' Mrs Roskilly and supporters leafleted all 1,000 homes in the village, asking them to vote on the scheme. Opponents won by almost two to one. Cambridgeshire police carried out their own private poll, then shelved the scheme. Source Daily Mail |
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