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Speed Camera Locations

Australian Speed Camera Locations

 

BLINDER Anti-Laser Gun System

 

BLINDER laser jammers are designed to mimic police laser guns and laser speed cameras to save you from a nasty speeding fine.Find out how well they work!

 

BLINDER Laser Jammers fit neatly into the cars bodywork

BLINDER laser jammers are designed to mimic police laser guns & speed cameras. Designed  to give you the few seconds needed  to get down to the speed limit. Highly effective blocking system that when used correctly will never bee detected.

 


 

 

GhostPlate™
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Super Protector GhostPlate™

 

Ghostplates number plate covers - Help Save Your Licence

GhostPlates™ number plate covers are designed stop photographs of your licence plate from special angles designed into the composite clear plastic covers.

Four different types of number plate cover are available.


GhostPlates™ Laser Shield


 

Ghostplates number plate covers - Help Save Your Licence

GhostPlates™ laser shield is designed to reduce the laser return signature from your front number plate. Police Officer aim their laser speed guns at the most reflective part of the front of your vehicle. Usually the front number plate. When used with a BLINDER laser jammer, your chances of getting a laser based speeding ticket are hugely reduced.

GhostPlates are your Best Defensive Aid on the market today. Find out how well they work!



 

BLINDER'S  STEALTH SPEED GUN JAMMER

 

 

BLINDER laser jammers are designed to mimic police laser guns and laser speed cameras to save you from a nasty speeding fine.Find out how well they work!

 


Get_the BLINDER_M27 Model

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BLINDER M27 & M47 also work against the Vitronic Poliscan Speed Laser Speed Camera. Free Software upgrades for life.


 

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Florida House Backs Down on Red Light Camera Fight

Florida House Backs Down on Red Light Camera Fight
Florida panel guts legislation that would have secured due process rights to vehicle owners accused by a camera.

The Florida legislature came close to banning the use of red light cameras last year. The state House voted 59 to 57 in favor of overturning the 2010 statute permitting the use of automated ticketing machines, but municipal and traffic camera lobbyists were successful in blocking the bill in the Senate.

This year, the anti-camera effort has returned, but a vote last Wednesday suggests photo enforcement opponents face an uphill battle. The House Transportation & Highway Safety Subcommittee voted 10 to 3 to gut the Florida Motorist Rights Restoration Act, which would have offered a number of protections for the owners of vehicles accused by a red light camera.

The measure would have required unannounced, third-party testing of the camera's accuracy every six months. Currently, there are no procedures in place for verifying the accuracy of a camera. The private, for-profit vendors who own and operate the machines self-certify the accuracy of their own products. The bill would have established a $500 penalty against any city or traffic camera vendor that issues a ticket from an inaccurate, untested device. The prosecution would also have the burden of establishing the guilt of the accused.

Subcommittee members were not interested. They stripped all of the motorist protections and replaced the measure with one that deals with rare cases of a vehicle owner filing an affidavit claiming someone else was driving the vehicle. The bill ensures the second recipient would get a "notice of violation" instead of a traffic citation carrying court costs.

Groups like the National Motorists Association supported the original version of the bill, although it wanted a provision mentioning speed cameras struck out.

"Short of a full camera ban, this act will at least help to curb the inevitable abuses that occur when government agencies focus more on revenue generation than on protecting citizens' rights," the group wrote in a message to Florida activists. "We support this legislation and encourage you to as well."

Camera opponents, nonetheless, were divided because of a line stating that photo radar devices would be subject to the testing requirement. Because speed cameras are not authorized under Florida law, the language would be seen by the court as the legislature's approval for their use, which is the very technique used by Tennessee lawmakers to bring red light cameras and speed cameras to the state.

Other legislation pending before the legislature would encourage longer yellow times as well as an all-out repeal of the red light camera authorization bill.