Posted
on Mon, Oct. 14, 2002
Firm
steps up to the plate to obscure car tags from cameras
By
JIM NOLAN
nolanj@phillynews.com
Red-light
cameras haven't gotten to Philadelphia yet, but a Harrisburg
company claims to have just the ticket to thwart them.
The
entrepreneurs at Beat The Camera.com are peddling a product
which will neutralize the effects of red-light cameras
and photo radar units by ruining the pictures they take
of a motorist's license plate.
The
company sells a "photo blocker" spray and a
customized license-plate cover that do nothing to alter
the readability of the plate to the naked eye.
But
when exposed to a flash photo taken at an angle - the
kind that most red-light cameras employ to capture violators
- the plates appear fuzzy, incomplete or washed out in
pictures.
Red-light cameras rely on accurate pictures of license
plates to trace motorist addresses and to prove guilt.
"The
link was that if they can't read the tag, they can't find
you," said Joe Scott.
The
"Photo Blocker" spray sells for $29.99, and
puts a high-gloss finish on a license plate that creates
a glare when photographed. The photo shield features a
plastic magnifying lens that bends light away from the
plate, blurring or obscuring tag numbers.
Scott
said the idea for Phantom Plate came after friends and
family in the Washington, D.C., area began receiving tickets
for running red lights at camera intersections.
"It
was clear they were just trying to make money on it,"
he said. "It was big business."
Now, with red-light cameras sweeping the nation, the business
of battling big brother is growing.
"Our position is that it's very easy to remedy your
behavior and not get a ticket," said Leslie Blakey
of the National Campaign to Stop Red Light Running - a
group funded by manufacturers of red-light-camera equipment.
"I
just don't think there's a lot of justification for people
to put those things on their cars so they can run lights
with impunity and not get ticketed."
Scott
insisted that neither his company nor his product encourages
motorists to break the law.
The products, said Scott, are designed to thwart authorities
that are "just trying to make money".
Right
now, there is no law in Pennsylvania preventing Beat The
Camera from plying their flash-reflecting wares to motorists.
"Someone
is always coming up with something to thwart our efforts
to make it safe," said police Capt. Thomas Nestel,
commanding officer of the Highway Patrol Division.
"It's
like a tennis match. We come up with something and they
come up with something.
Ultimately,
though, the folks at Beat The Camera continue to benefit
from a law they hate.
"The
more cameras out there, the more tickets people get,"
said Scott. "Then the more likely they'll be buying
our product."
Copyright
© 2003 BeatTheCamera.com
- All Rights Reserved
BeatTheCamera™
is
an established Trade Mark