Red Light Camera
Posted: Mon Sep 30, 2013 5:28 am
I have a red light camera ticket if I don't pay it will it cause me to loose my chl ???
The focal point for Texas firearms information and discussions
http://mail.texaschlforum.com/
The Sixth Amendment.?jmra wrote:Idk, but why don't you just pay it?
I'm with you on the 6th Amendment, but I confess to mixed feelings. I am personally aware of one intersection in Pasadena, California in which red-light cameras had a direct and almost immediate effect of reducing traffic fatalities. On the far side of this intersection as one approaches it going northbound on a heavily traveled 1-way street, that street becomes a freeway onramp onto a busy northbound freeway on the other side of the signal. What happens is that as northbound traffic approaches the signal, drivers tend to accelerate toward it, trying to make it onto the onramp before the signal changes, and to accelerate to merging speed by the time they are on the onramp. The cross street is a major 2-way thoroughfare which people use for getting across town during rush hour. To make matters worse, the intersection is an almost blind approach from a couple of directions.RoyGBiv wrote:The Sixth Amendment.?jmra wrote:Idk, but why don't you just pay it?![]()
http://www.mddriversalliance.org/2011/0 ... ht-to.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Your problem with claiming that the 6th amendment to the Constitution prevents you from being prosecuted is that you're in Texas, and the legislature in Texas specifically made red-light cameras a CIVIL complaint, and not a criminal complaint, which is where the 6th amendment would come in to play. Maryland sounds like they do as a low-grade criminal offense, just like Texas, when they issue you a traffic ticket from a cop.RoyGBiv wrote:The Sixth Amendment.?jmra wrote:Idk, but why don't you just pay it?![]()
http://www.mddriversalliance.org/2011/0 ... ht-to.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
The Seventh Amendment would still apply to Civil matters tried in any court.n5wd wrote:Your problem with claiming that the 6th amendment to the Constitution prevents you from being prosecuted is that you're in Texas, and the legislature in Texas specifically made red-light cameras a CIVIL complaint, and not a criminal complaint, which is where the 6th amendment would come in to play. Maryland sounds like they do as a low-grade criminal offense, just like Texas, when they issue you a traffic ticket from a cop.RoyGBiv wrote:The Sixth Amendment.?jmra wrote:Idk, but why don't you just pay it?![]()
http://www.mddriversalliance.org/2011/0 ... ht-to.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
In Texas, they will come after you civily - by preventing your re-registration of your vehicle, in some counties of the state (Tarrant county, where I live, is one of those - got to watch a young 20-ish guy be told he couldn't re-register his car because of an outstanding red-light ticket, then cause a ruckuss in the northwest sub-courthouse, and then get himself hauled away by the Tarrant County Sherrif's Office for disorderly conduct and assault by contact - now THAT would get your CHL cancelled). They can also do things that will wind up on your credit report, since it is a civil fine, and not a criminal offense.
See this page to learn how to contest it: http://fortworthtexas.gov/tpw/info/?id=50258
In Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re-examined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.
I'll tell you exactly how it works, from the red light camera, to writing my fair share of tickets. You know how when you pull up to an intersection, they used to have the old loop detectors in the ground? Well, the new technology now is that camera you see pointing at you on the light pole. It is a camera with a digital box drawn over each lane. When the pixels change, it signals the camera that a car is present, and to change the light. The red light cameras work the same way. Instead of one box, they draw two boxes for each lane. The cameras can only get up to four lanes, though, so if it's a five lane road, you get to pick the one you can't monitor. For each lane is two boxes. The red light camera uses the same type of signal camera. You draw two boxes for each lane immediately prior to the stop lines, then you set a speed for each lane. For lanes where you must stop and remain stopped. These are usually set at 1-2 mph. The software will calculate your vehicle's speed as it breaks the two boxes. If your speed is calculated to be above that threshold, it triggers the camera. For areas where you can make a right turn, these are usually set with speeds of 3-5 mph. If you cross the boxes going more than the allotted speed, the camera trips. I often heard the argument that someone made a right turn because most of their slowest speed was well into the intersection, so they felt like they made a close enough stop. When they entered the intersection and broke the threshold speed, they were moving much faster. If you are in an intersection, beyond the stopping point, waiting on a clear path to turn left, you can't be captured by the camera because you have already crossed the two boxes. I was in a meeting with all the cheeses from DFW, and we tried to come up with a standard definition of a stop. Some cities were using the stop line, others were using the curb line. Where I worked, we decided to use the stop line to avoid confusion. Dallas used the prolongation of the curb, which would technically get you more violations, because someone who legally couldn't be issued a ticket for running a red light under state law, could be issued a camera ticket under city ordinance. So in essence, they'd crossed the stop line, being in the intersection after the light turned red, but since they hadn't passed the curb line, the city ordinance hadn't considered them 'in the intersection' yet. All the raw data went to the vendor where they had clerks processing each capture. They view the video and the images, and if they feel it is a good violation, they put it in a review queue for the agency to review. We used the police traffic division. If an officer rejected a violation, it went to a supervisor who had to approve the rejection. I will tell you, the officers varied on their discretion with those just as much as they did on the street. Some issued violations that I wouldn't have even issued.Jumping Frog wrote: I believe the red light infraction happens when you ENTER the intersection and it is red. If you are past the intersection white stop line so that you are partially or fully in the intersection before the light turns red, then you lawfully exit and clear the intersection.