Daily Mail News

The number plate spray that claims it defeats cameras

Friday July 4, 2003
From George Gordon in New York

A number plate spray, which supposedly defeats speed cameras, is proving a hit with drivers.

The aerosol is said to reflect the flash from radar cameras, turning registration plates into an unreadable white blur.

Its makers, Phantom Plate, say the PhotoBlocker is invisible to the naked eye and that a single application lasts for weeks. The spray is on sale through a U.S. website and is likely to attract interest from British drivers.

Joe Scott, Phantom Plate’s marketing director, said: “I know of no jurisdiction that bans the spray. Most states have laws against obscuring or distorting license plates, but PhotoBlocker only obscures the license plate in a photo, making it legal and difficult to detect with the naked eye.

He said high demand for the £20 product was evidence of growing public anger at the use of the speed cameras to generate revenue rather than reduce accidents.

“Decent folks – law-abiding citizens – are getting penalized left and right for clearing intersections a little too late, or entering and then backing up,” he said.

But RAC spokesman Kevin Delaney warned the PhotoBlocker could be illegal in the UK and might not even work.

“If the intention was to beat the speed camera – and the could prove it – then it might be illegal to use this product in Britain,” he said.

“More fundamental is the question of its effectiveness.

“A number of similar products have been introduced here and over the last four or five years, and none of them has worked.”

Captain John Lamb, head of in Denver, Colorado, said the spray had worked in tests he had supervised.

“It proved effective producing a glare over the license plate,” he said.

FOX TV network, which filmed the tests, also reported that it was “surprisingly effective.”

Steve Kholer, of the Californian Highway Patrol, which levies fines of up to £150 on speeding motorists, said “the law would catch up with” any product that proved to be successful.

Phantom Plate’s website boasts: “Make your license plate invisible to cameras. If they can’t read it, they can’t catch you.”

The company also markets the Photoshield, a plastic cover that hides registration numbers.

The website refers to “protection from cameras” but also claims the plate covers are “a great way to protect your license plate from dust, dirt and bugs.”

The Photoshield makes the number plate unreadable from the side or above, but not directly from behind.

It is legal to manufacture and sell it in the U.S. but use by drivers is prohibited after new legislation was brought in.

Some 21 U.S. states use cameras and the highly-expensive support work to keep them in action is achieved with help from manufacturers and operators.

They take a percentage of the revenues from fines.

g.gordon@dailymail.co.uk

CBS News

WASHINGTON, Aug. 16, 2004

Busted For Speeding On Camera?

(CBS) Every year, millions of motorists across the country are busted by an invisible big brother- the hundreds of cameras that are set up to catch speeders and people who drive through red lights.

Now, there is a product that claims to level the playing field.

The speed trap could have nabbed any mommy-mobile cruising through Washington that June morning. It got CBS News Correspondent Joie Chen.

But she didn’t even know she’d gotten her first speeding ticket until it came in the mail nearly three weeks later.

She was caught in the act by one of the hundreds of radar cameras used by around the country.

Besides the District of Columbia, where she had her run-in, 18 states have found speeding and red-light cameras save lives, and manpower, while generating big revenues.

Such states are:

  • District of Columbia
  • New York
  • Maryland
  • California
  • Virginia
  • Arizona
  • Colorado
  • Delaware
  • Georgia
  • Illinois
  • North Carolina
  • Ohio
  • Oregon
  • Rhode Island
  • Texas
  • South Dakota
  • Tennessee
  • Washington
  • New Mexico

In D.C., red-light runners and speeders caught on camera have paid more than $80 million in fines since the flashes started going off five years ago, but insist it’s not about the money.

Inspector Kevin Keegan of the DC Metropolitan Department says, “It’s about safety. Nobody wants to hurt anybody or have a relative hurt and that’s what we’re talking about here.”

And face it, drivers speed. At a particular Washington spot, where a camera is installed, six cars went by in just 19 seconds. Five of them will get tickets in the mail. That’s at least $250 in fines, in less than 20 seconds!

Everyone’s got a story.

Christina Lobo of Bethesda, Md., says, “Me and my husband have already gotten several tickets when we weren’t really speeding.”

And everyone seems to have someone at home who’s always getting caught.

Mike Jones of Capitol Heights, Md., says about a relative, “She’s gotten over $1,200 of tickets, at least. I mean she just runs through the lights, and the lights just FLASH.”

So they’re trying a product that claims to thwart the cameras.

The idea is to make the license tag glossy – so shiny that it reflects the radar camera’s flash.

The cops say it doesn’t work. But an auto shop has sold more than 700 cans, and only four drivers have called to complain.

In an unscientific experiment, Chen tried it on a CBS staffer’s tag and tried to reproduce the flash with a Polaroid camera.

The glare seemed worse at some angles. But it’s hard to tell whether any speeders would be spared.

Other products, like covers that slip over the license tag, are illegal. But dealers insist this stuff is fine.

Will Foreman of the Eastover Auto Supply says, “How can they outlaw something making their license plate clean and glossy? Are they going to make it illegal to wax your car?

Maybe. D.C. says spraying tags amounts to defacing government property. Chen didn’t try it. She figured, she’s in enough trouble already.

So far there are no specific laws that make these kinds of products illegal.

www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/08/16/earlyshow/living/main636197.shtml

The New York Times

Safety of -light cameras questioned

By Jonathan Miller
http://news.com.com/Safety+of+-light+cameras+questioned/2100-7341_3-5515138.html

On a perfectly clear day in October, Carla Correa drove her Honda Civic toward an intersection in Baltimore. When the light turned yellow, she did not cruise through. She hit the brakes.

Seconds later, a truck rammed her from behind, and her car was wrecked.

Why would she do such a thing? The answer could be found in a box mounted on a nearby post, with a lens pointed at her license plate.

“It’s an intersection that I’ve been through a million times before, and I knew that it was a quick yellow light,” Correa, a confessed neurotic when it comes to getting a ticket, said in a telephone interview.

Correa, 25, also knew that the intersection was equipped with a camera. “And when I saw the yellow, I freaked out.”

Though unhurt, Correa has made a resolution: from now on, if it seems the light is about to turn red, she is going to run it. “If I hadn’t known there was a red-light camera there, I would have gone through,” she said. “Every time I see the red-light camera, I’m terrified by it. It’s a…ticket.” And that ticket would cost her $75.

Her experience is not an anomaly. Cameras like the one she spotted are now in use in more than 100 American cities. Activated by road sensors when a car enters an intersection belatedly, the systems provide evidence of a violation, including photos of the license plate and in some cases, the driver.

While Baltimore reports that violations for running red lights have gone down 60 percent at the 47 intersections with such cameras, several studies in recent years–in places like San Diego, Charlotte, N.C., and Australia–have offered a fuzzier picture. The studies have shown that the reduction in side-angle collisions at the intersections has been wholly or largely offset by an increase in rear-end accidents like Correa’s.

In addition, there has been the criticism of the cameras’ use to generate revenue from fines–in some cases exceeding $300 per violation, with points on a driver’s record–and of revenue-sharing arrangements with providers of the technology. Those arrangements, critics contend, have led to the placement of cameras not necessarily where they would best promote safety, but where they will rack up the most violations.

Those questions, along with malfunctions and legal challenges, have led some local governments to remove the cameras. Virginia’s legislature is considering whether to renew a law, expiring in July, that permits the cameras, used in six Virginia cities.

Despite the problems, many cities, including Philadelphia and Cincinnati, are moving forward in installing automated red-light cameras. Many others couldn’t be happier with the technology. “We think it’s doing a wonderful job,” said Steve Galgano, executive director of engineering in the division of the Department of Transportation in New York City, where 50 such cameras are in operation–along with 200 decoys–at periodically changing locations.

The story of the red-light camera is one of technology, safety, politics, behavior modification–and unintended consequences.

Some contend that revenue has trumped safety.

“I disapprove of the privatization of a function,” said Mark Kleinschmidt, a city councilman in Chapel Hill, N.C., where a private contractor not only installed the camera system but also carried out the initial screening of potential violations. Last year, Kleinschmidt persuaded a slim majority of his colleagues to end the program after four months.

“I don’t think we should bid it out to a corporation; it’s strictly a function,” he said. “Then there’s this distaste in the minds of many, that the whole concept is a corporate moneymaking scheme.”

For their part, camera-equipped cities and the private companies that contract with them dismiss such claims, saying the cameras have reduced violations. The largest provider in the country, Affiliated Computer Services, has 55 clients in the United States and Canada, including San Diego and Washington, D.C. It provides camera systems and in some cases administers the processing of citations. The cameras first made their appearance in Europe and Australia in the 1970s, but came to the United States only in 1993, when, with little fanfare or warning, New York City started installing them.

Red-light deaths

According to the National Highway Safety Administration, which endorses the camera systems’ use, 1,000 people are killed each year in red-light violations. Advocates of the cameras have championed them as effective tools in reducing accidents and deaths, freeing officers to perform other crime-fighting duties, and as an efficient way to raise revenue in the process.

When Mayor Anthony Williams of Washington, D.C., acknowledged that twofold aim in 2002–“The cameras are about safety and revenue,” he said–his comments outraged AAA, which withdrew its support for the camera program there. About 120 cities in 18 states and the District of Columbia now use the cameras, according to statistics from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, an enthusiastic backer of the cameras that receives all of its financing from insurers.

“We’ve been able to document clearly that red-light running is a problem,” said Richard Retting, a senior transportation engineer at the institute and an author of several studies on the subject. The cameras “are very effective tools for enhancing safety consistently,” he said, adding: “Drivers know what to expect. They know if they break a law, there’ll be a consequence.”

That consequence is a ticket in the mail. Here is the chain of events before that happens: In most cases, a magnetic coil is embedded in the pavement just before an intersection. When the light turns red, this activates the coil, which helps the system record any vehicle that rolls over the coil, and its speed. A photo is snapped of the license plate, sometimes from both the front and the back. (In California the driver’s face is photographed.) Then the company or local officials, or both, review the image, and the ticket is sent out.

Officials at Affiliated Computer Services say they are developing laser technology that would be aimed at cars. If effective, it could replace the coil system. A pilot program in several cities will be introduced in the next few months, but officials declined to name the cities.

Some drivers have escalated the technological arms race by using simple sprays and shields that they believe obscure the license plates when photographed. The sprays, called Photoblocker, cost $20 to $30. The drivers who swear by them claim that they have run red lights and not received tickets. Officials at Affiliated say that studies conducted by the company show the sprays to be ineffective. Nonetheless, many states, like Maryland, now specifically outlaw the use of them.

A shakedown?
The resistance to the cameras is not just at the individual level, however.

Organizations like the National Motorists Association, a drivers’ advocacy group based in Wisconsin, denounce the use of cameras. “It violates due process,” said Greg Mauz, a truck driver from Florida and researcher for the association, “because it assumes you’re guilty until proven innocent.” Roger Hedgecock, a former mayor of San Diego who is now a radio talk show host there, called the cameras an old-fashioned shakedown.

In a court case that resulted in the dismissal of nearly 300 tickets in 2001, a former employee testified that Lockheed Martin IMS, which operated the San Diego system, regularly scouted intersections in some cities based on high volume, not locations that were most accident-prone. Documents revealed that officials sought locations with steep gradients and short yellow-light times.

A California Department of Transportation auditor’s report in 2002 concluded that the yellow-light duration at two camera-equipped intersections in San Diego had been shortened, but said this had been a mistake. Thousands of drivers were ticketed, though a handful won dismissals. The city’s camera program was suspended in 2001, but has since resumed.

Today, officials at Affiliated Computer Services, which purchased Lockheed Martin IMS in August 2001 for $825 million, acknowledge the past troubles in San Diego. “It was a breakdown in communication with us–the vendor–and the department of transportation,” said Maurice Hannigan, a vice president at the company.

To reverse some of the ill wills, the company says it has restructured its contracts with cities to avoid any perception that it would benefit from maximizing the number of citations. Instead of receiving a share of the fines, Hannigan said, the company is now typically paid a flat monthly fee.

Costly tickets

Even when the fines go solely to the public coffers, the tickets can be costly. In Sacramento, the maximum penalty for running a red light is $351. Those numbers add up. Even in Washington, D.C., where the fine is $75, the city has collected $28.9 million since installing the cameras in 1999, according to the city’s Web site. (In some jurisdictions, violators also have points added to their record, which can increase their insurance rates.)

Until recently, findings on the effectiveness of cameras have been mixed at best. One of the most-cited studies, performed by Retting of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, found that crashes decreased at all intersections in Oxnard, Calif., by 5.4 percent after cameras were installed at some locations. Retting did not look specifically at intersections with the cameras, arguing that a spillover effect from the camera intersections would affect the data at all intersections.

Studies elsewhere, however, made a striking finding: Rear-end accidents have shot up at intersections with cameras. In 2002 a consultant’s study in San Diego reported that the number of crashes at camera intersections had increased by 3 percent after the cameras were installed, almost all of it a result of a 37 percent increase in rear-endings. “This finding is not consistent with the program’s overall objective of improving safety,” the report’s authors concluded.

But studies to be presented at a transportation conference next week in Washington, D.C., by two researchers, Forrest Council and Bhagwant Persaud, reach a more nuanced conclusion. They found that rear-endings had gone up nearly 15 percent after cameras were installed in seven cities, with injuries from such accidents up 24 percent. Right-angle crashes declined by 24 percent, with injuries down nearly 16 percent. Weighing the economic impact and severity of injuries, they found the overall effect positive.

Or as Hannigan of Affiliated put it: “Would you rather have someone coming at you at 40 miles an hour, going through your window, or rear-ending you at 10?”

Entire contents, Copyright © 2005 The New York Times. All rights reserved.

Copyright ©1995-2005 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved.

The LA Times

img

Fuzzing up the picture

A license-plate spray thwarts cameras set up to catch drivers running red lights.
But what of safety — and the law?

By Jeanne Wright, Special to The Times – Jan 5, 2005

A product that hides license plates from -enforcement cameras at intersections may appeal to those frustrated by malfunctioning cameras but poses a major safety threat from those who hope to use it to slip through red lights.

For $30 a can, Photoblocker sprays on a high-gloss permanent reflective finish on a license plate.

“The glossy surface acts as a mirror to reflect a photo-radar flash back to the camera, overexposing the image,” says Joe Scott, marketing director at PhantomPlate Inc., maker of the spray. As a result, the plate is unreadable and the driver avoids an expensive citation, usually in the hundreds of dollars.

Whether it’s legal or not in California is unclear. LAPD spokesman Jack Richter says any product that makes a license plate unreadable is illegal. But CHP spokesman Tom Marshall says there has been no definitive ruling. “It’s a sticky issue” that will have to be litigated or legislated, he says.

Legal or not, the product is sure to become a hot issue.

“I shouldn’t be surprised that someone has come up with a product that actually helps people evade red-light cameras, ostensibly encouraging them to run red lights,” says Candysse Miller, executive director of the Insurance Information Network of California.

“Why would anyone with a conscience encourage people to run red lights?” she asks. “What’s next? A product to block security cameras at the corner 7-Eleven?”

The unnerving beauty of this product is that, according to its makers, there is no way you can spot a license plate that has been sprayed with the solution. Unlike covers that completely conceal the plate number and are illegal, the spray is invisible to the naked eye. Only the red-light camera would find the plate unreadable, Scott says.

The executive denies that his company’s product encourages reckless driving. “We do not condone speeding or running red lights,” he says. He argues that the spray is legal and that most drivers caught by the cameras did not intend to run the light. Domestic and international sales of Photoblocker have reached more than 250,000, he says.

It certainly doesn’t take a rocket scientist to know how dangerous it is to blast through red lights with impunity. and others who see the carnage firsthand understand how serious a threat red-light runners are to others.

The National Highway Safety Administration estimates that 1,000 people a year are killed and 50,000 injured in accidents involving running red lights. From 1999 to 2003, there were 4,846 fatal red-light-running crashes, with 5,340 deaths.

“Red-light running is unpardonable. It’s right on drunk driving, speed and lack of seat belt use in lives lost needlessly,” says Harry Teter, executive director of the American Trauma Society. “People are in such a hurry, they are willing to take dangerous and unnecessary risks.”

Do Photoblocker and similar products work? It depends on the type of enforcement camera and how it’s positioned, according to LAPD Sgt. Steven Foster, who heads the department’s automated camera enforcement program.

So far, Foster says, the LAPD has not seen a rash of intersection photos with blocked-out license plates. “We see some occasional blurring,” he says.

Motorists who oppose red-light-camera enforcement view it as intrusive. They often point to cases where drivers have been wrongly ticketed because of equipment malfunctions or human errors. Critics of red-light cameras contend cities install the cameras primarily to generate revenues.

“It’s all about the revenues, not safety,” Scott says. “Law-abiding citizens are being ticketed unjustly.”

But the LAPD’s Richter says he’s appalled that a product would allow people to run red lights without being punished. People who are spending money on a spray to hide their license plate numbers “are going through a lot of effort to break the law. Why don’t they save themselves the money and drive safely?”

Meanwhile, Scott says sales of Photoblocker skyrocketed during the holiday season.

“It’s the perfect gift. It’s permanent. It will last a lifetime,” he says.

Of course, if you’re in the habit of running red lights, your life expectancy may not be all that long.

Jeanne Wright can be reached at jeanrite@aol.com.

The Washingtontimes Times

http://www.washtimes.com/national/20030703-120901-3612r.htm

License-plate spray foils cameras

By Steve Sexton
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Motorists have litigated against them, fired bullets at them and thrown garbage on them — all to get back at the cameras that have caught them in the act of running a red light or speeding.

Now they have a new weapon in their arsenal, and it comes in a can for $29.99. A clear spray called Photoblocker can be applied to license plates to make them hyper-reflective and unreadable when the camera flashes.

The product, marketed by online merchant Phantom Plate (www.phantomplate.com), defies laws that preclude motorists from placing covers over their license plates but have no provisions for a clear spray.

The marketing director for Photoblocker, said he knows of no jurisdictions that ban the spray. Most states have laws against obscuring or distorting license plates, but Photoblocker obscures the license plate only in a photo, Mr. Scott said, making it legal or at least difficult for to detect with the naked eye.

The District, Maryland and Virginia all have laws permitting the use of red-light cameras, and the Federal Highway Administration says 21 states have red-light or speed-detection cameras in place or are considering installing the devices.

Lt. Patrick Burke of the Metropolitan Department said the spray isn’t banned by any laws in the District, but he has yet to see a spray that is effective.

The spray might slip through a loophole in state law, said Steve Kholer, a spokesman for the California Highway Patrol, who said he had not heard of the product. Citations in California can cost up to $275.

If the spray becomes a problem, Mr. Kholer said, the law will catch up with it.

Critics of cameras say the devices violate privacy and enforce unfairly. Mr. Scott says the use of the cameras constitutes entrapment.

“Decent folks — law-abiding citizens — are getting penalized left and right for clearing intersections a little too late, or entering and then backing up,” he said, adding that one client reported being ticketed for a red-light violation when he was part of a -escorted funeral procession.

He said thousands of cans of Photoblocker have been sold.

“The cameras were put in place just to raise revenue and not to make things safer,” Mr. Scott said.

The District has collected $21.6 million in fines since August 1999 from its 39 red-light cameras. An additional $29 million has been collected from speed cameras since their installation in August 2001.

Roy Reyer, a former officer, operates PhotoBuster.com, a Web site that distributes a product similar to Photoblocker called Photo Fog. He said anger with the “Big Brother attitude” of government has fueled the innovation.

Clear license plate covers preceded the spray. They deflect light to make plates unreadable from the side and from above, but not from directly behind a car. Some jurisdictions that employ the camera-enforcement technology have banned these products.

That hasn’t stopped Phantom Plate and other distributors from selling the covers. Clear Covers advertises them online as a “great way to protect your front license plate from dust, dirt and bugs.”

In a game of innovation to stay ahead of enforcement, the market has produced radar detectors and radar jammers — now banned in some states — as well as a license plate cover that deflects radar.

Motorists aren’t the only ones with clever tricks. Paradise Valley, Ariz., considered hiding its radar cameras in cactus plants along roadways, the Weekly Standard reported. Outrage from residents forced officials to reconsider.

ABC 7

ABC 7 “Over 700 cans sold in less than half a day! It works!”

Denver FOX 31

Denver FOX 31 Speed Cameras in Australia Wrongfully Ticketing City Buses & Cars (Part II)

Australian TV

Australian TV It’s a trap. Yellow lights are being shortened to generate revenue.

Chicago Sun Times

Reflective license plate spray beats camera tickets in a flash

Thursday, July 3, 2003

Hate the idea of impersonal cameras ticketing you for running a red light or driving 36mph in a 25mph zone? The antidote might be in a red aerosol can.

A Harrisburg, PA company sells a spray to stop camera-generated tickets by making your license plates so reflective that they blind a spying camera when its flash goes off.

Tests show that “PhotoBlocker,” a product sold over the Internet by Phantom Plate, can help drivers beat -enforcement camera tickets by coating their license plates with a spray.

Phantom Plate started selling the product three years ago. The company was born primarily out of anger over the growing number of places on the East Coast that were using cameras to enforce laws.

“We had a lot of family members and friends who were getting tickets right and left, “ said Joe Scott, marketing director for Phantom Plate.

Knowing that a mirror reflecting a camera flash ruins a photograph, Phantom Plate founders experimented with ways to make license plates hyper-reflective, Scott said. After much testing, they struck upon the spray.

Since then, the company has sold thousands of the $29.99 cans that can cover up to six license plates, Scott said.

Scripps Howard News Service

Delaware News Journal

License covers could cancel out red-light cameras

Wilmington considers outlawing plate-obscuring devices sold on the Internet

By ADAM TAYLOR
Staff reporter
12/02/2002

The courtroom is not the only place motorists can try to beat Wilmington’s red-light cameras.

They also can go to the Internet, where companies sell a spray and plastic covers designed to prevent the cameras from clearly capturing the letters and numbers on license plates as drivers zip through red lights.

City and state officials said the products could become an effective counter to the high-tech cameras. There is no city law that prohibits their use, and there is nothing on the state books to ban them, either.

“Technology is ahead of us,” Delaware Deputy Attorney General Jim Hanley said.

That is good news to John Brown, a 76-year-old Wilmington resident who recently lost his appeal of a $75 ticket issued after one of the cameras caught him. Brown said he thinks the city installed the devices simply to make money.

He said he was unaware of the new products, but “they sound great.”

There are 10 cameras in Wilmington and 10 more will be installed soon. Twenty additional cameras will be installed across Delaware next year, said Albert Guckes, an aide to state Transportation Secretary Nathan Hayward III.

More than 40,000 people in Wilmington have been ticketed by the cameras in 18 months. If motorists speed to buy the spray and plate covers, city officials said, they will floor it to City Hall to outlaw the products.

Councilman Gerald L. Brady said officials from Affiliated Computer Services Inc., the company that operates the cameras for the city, have told him that the products could pose a problem.

“It’s something that we are tracking,” he said. “I would introduce a bill to ban anything that would obscure the camera’s view and impede the judicial process.”

Wilmington Communications Director John Rago said there is no evidence that any photographs have been blurred by motorists who have used the products. Joe Scott, the owner of Phantom Plate, said purchases by Delawareans from the Harrisburg, Pa., company’s Web site have been brisk, but he would not provide sales figures.

The cameras are connected to underground sensors at the stop lights of the intersections. The sensor activates when a vehicle approaches at a high rate of speed when the light is red. Pictures of the vehicle are taken before it goes through the intersection and after it goes through the red light.

Phantom Plate’s technology is simpler, Scott said. The $19.99 Photo Blocker spray is a high-gloss material that makes a glare when the light hits it, blocking the plate’s tag numbers in the photograph. The $25 and $26.99 plate covers have magnifying lenses that send light away from the plates and the cameras, which blurs the pictures. The plates remain visible to the naked eye, said Scott, who started his company six years ago.

“People are sick and tired of these cameras,” he said. “But we don’t condone anybody running red lights. It’s like Porsche, which makes a car to go 200 mph but is not responsible for people driving that fast.”

Jeff Agnew, the spokesman for the National Campaign to Stop Red Light Running, an advocacy group that gets money from companies that make and operate red-light camera equipment, said the products hurt public safety.

“We think this can undermine the deterrent effect of these life-saving technologies,” he said.

Wilmington, which splits part of the proceeds from the tickets with Affiliated Computer Services, made $522,000 in the program’s first year. But Rago said the cameras’ primary mission is to save lives, and he thinks they are working. The cameras, which were placed at the most dangerous intersections in the city, capture an average 60 percent fewer violators now than when the program began.

Affiliated Computer Services is competing to run the 20 cameras outside Wilmington. Scott Kidner, a lobbyist for the company in Dover, said Delaware’s motorists will determine whether city and state laws would be needed to ban the products.

“It’s a little too early to tell,” he said. “If we see an explosion of these products and a problem with prosecuting people pops up, I can foresee a legislative fix.”

Whitney Hoffman of Bear was ticketed twice in Wilmington, but both cases were thrown out because of administrative problems in the program’s first months. She said an officer would not have cited her for running the lights by one-tenth of a second, which is what the cameras did. But she said she would not purchase the new products.

“This should be about justice and fair play,” she said. “I don’t think the cameras represent that, but I don’t feel the need to buy those things. I’m just extra careful where I know the cameras are.”

Reach Adam Taylor at 324-2787 or ataylor@delawareonline.com