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http://www.thewbalchannel.com/news/2633836/detail.html?z=dp&dpswid=2265815&dppid=68701
Stopping
Red-Light
Cameras
With
Spray
BALTIMORE
--
Red-light
cameras
may
have
met
their
match.
The
11
News
I-Team
has
discovered
a
controversial
product
that's
supposed
to
shield
your
license
plate
from
the
camera's
eye
and
people
are
buying
it.
WBAL-TV
11
News
I-Team
reporter
David
Collins
asks
does
it
work?
Is
it
legal?
And
will
it
put
your
safety
at
risk?
Collins
said
the
red-light
cameras
loom
over
busy
intersections
--
poised
like
ray
guns
to
zap
the
tags
of
drivers
who
run
red
lights.
Taking
cash
in
a
flash
and
screaming,
"Gotcha!",
Baltimore
City
has
47
red-light
cameras
--
more
than
any
other
city
in
the
entire
country
--
taking
in
more
than
$23.3
million
since
1999
and
forcing
some
people
to
find
inventive
ways
to
beat
the
system.
This
is
one
of
them:
a
clear
spray
designed
to
blind
the
cameras.
Photo
Blocker
is
supposed
to
make
license
plates
so
reflective,
the
tag
becomes
unreadable.
The
man
behind
a
red-light
camera
sign
--
known
as
Mike
--
doesn't
want
police
to
know
who
he
is.
But
he
says
he's
one
satisfied
customer.
Collins
asked,
"How
do
you
know
it
works?"
Mike
responded,
"I've
seen
the
red-light
cameras
go
off
right
behind
me,
and
I've
never
received
anything
so
I
guess
no
news
is
good
news."
The
I-Team
contacted
every
jurisdiction
in
the
state
which
uses
red-light
cameras
--
hoping
to
one
would
put
Photo
Blocker
to
the
test.
But
all
declined.
ACS,
the
company
that
operates
most
of
the
cameras,
also
refused
to
test
it
with
our
cameras
rolling.
A
representative
said,
"We
tested
it
ourselves
(and)
it
doesn't
work.
Take
our
word
for
it."
The
Denver,
Colo.,
police
department
wasn't
afraid
to
test
Photo
Blocker.
They
used
it
against
one
of
their
speed
cameras.
Based
on
the
photo
finish,
the
product
works.
State
lawmakers
outlawed
plate
covers
but
the
statute
doesn't
specifically
address
sprays.
Collins
asked
Baltimore
County
police
spokesman
Sean
Vinson,
"Is
it
legal
or
illegal?"
"We
are
not
sure,"
he
said.
"We
have
not
had
an
interpretation
of
the
statute
from
the
courts."
But
even
if
it
were
outlawed
in
Maryland,
it
would
be
nearly
impossible
to
detect.
The
company
that
makes
and
markets
photo
blocker
says
it
doesn't
encourage
any
one
to
run
lights.
"It's
for
people
who
accidentally
get
caught
or
accidentally
speeding,"
said
Ron
Gamm
from
phantomplate.com.
"They
don't
necessarily
do
it."
At
$30
a
can,
the
makers
of
Photo
Blocker
are
cashing
in.
Since
red-light
cameras
have
become
a
traffic
control
fixture,
the
business
of
battling
Big
Brother
has
grown.
A
spokesperson
for
ACS,
the
company
that
operates
Baltimore's
red
light
cameras,
said
accidents
have
dropped
63
percent
and
injuries
are
down
88
percent
since
the
red
light
camera
program
began.
ACS refused to test
Photo Blocker with WBAL-TV 11's cameras rolling,
but a spokesperson said "We tested it ourselves,
it doesn't work, take our word for it."
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