Monday, October 6, 2008

Outdoor surveillance cameras

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Article source Link




Arret! British and other foreign motorists caught speeding in France could soon see penalty points deducted from their licenses at home
Instead, those pulled over for speeding by mobile police patrols are handed a minimum 65 on-the-spot fine, and if they can't pay up they are escorted to the nearest cashpoint, and anyone refusing to pay is liable to arrest and having their car impounded.
The transport ministry spokesman said: 'Foreign drivers behave like the laws of the road don't apply to them.
'Many hundreds of thousands of them drive at whatever speed they like knowing that if they are flashed by a roadside camera the ticket they will never receive a ticket.
'Currently the only way to catch them is by mobile patrols which actually have to follow them and pull them over.'

A study by the French transport ministry found 900,000 German driver, 550,000 Britons and 350,000 Italians are flashed by French cameras every year.
And although foreign motorists only make up five per cent of traffic on French roads, they are responsible for 27 per cent of all speeding offences.

In Brussels on Thursday, Mr Bussereau will be calling for Europe-wide laws, including the creation of new technology and exchange of number plate information, so that speeding offences committed in one country can be punished in another.

The new system would also mean that British cars given parking tickets in France could also have the fines sent to their UK addresses



Now that Fry has been convicted, the investigation is not over, said Lepard.
We will never close a file like this...and as long as there's any chance in identify who that accomplice was, we'll never give up on that, said Lepard.
Fry was convicted after he confessed to the arson in front of a hidden video camera that had been sent up by an elite undercover squad of RCMP officers who pretended to be gangsters.
In the video, Fry talked about spreading gasoline and then igniting the blaze because he held a grudge against the only person to survive the fire, Bolingo Etibako.
None of the other members of the Etibako family was in court to hear the verdict, which came on the third day of deliberations after the trial wrapped up on Friday. Bolingo Etibako, who jumped out a second-storey window to escape the fire, was in prison for an unrelated bank robbery.
But Yannick Etibako, whose mother and siblings died in the fire, later said the verdict does bring some relief




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