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Drivers
Try an Anti-Photo Finish
By
Don Oldenburg
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, July 21, 2004; Page A01
If
you inspected Will Foreman's SUV, you might notice
how clean and shiny his license plates
are. But you probably wouldn't detect the clear
glossy coating the Howard County resident sprayed
on them eight months ago to thwart traffic cameras
from snapping readable photos of his tags.
"It
must work," says Foreman. He has not received
a traffic camera ticket since using a $29.99 spray
called PhotoBlocker.
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| Auto
store
owner
Will
Foreman
uses
PhotoBlocker
spray
to
reflect
the
flash
of
a
photo-radar
camera.
(Gerald
Martineau
--
The
Washington
Post)
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Foreman,
owner of Eastover Auto Supply ,
also coated the plates of his eight delivery trucks.
He says they previously drew $1,200 in photo-radar
fines but none since the application. And he has
had no complaints from customers who have bought
about 700 cans of the spray at his shop. "If
it didn't work, we would've heard about it,"
he says.
Furman
Eldridge of Cheverly bought PhotoBlocker
a year ago as "a defense mechanism."
He has enough faith in it that he says he gave
a can to his pastor.
"I've
always been a law-abiding citizen," he says.
"You don't want people speeding, but I don't
think it should flash you if you're just going
five miles over the limit."
As
jurisdictions increasingly turn to automated red-light
and speed-radar cameras, products promising consumers
stealth protection have multiplied. Dozens are
on the market. In addition to the products' effectiveness,
their use raises legal and ethical questions for
consumers.
Cheaper
than radar detectors (which are illegal in the
District and Virginia), sprays such as PhotoBlocker,
are advertised as reflecting the flash back at
automated cameras to overexpose the license plate.
The photo is said to look like a picture taken
with a flash in front of a mirror -- glared. Other
products cover license plates with plastic shields.
The Reflector ($19.95) uses reflective
sparkles embedded in clear plastic. The
PhotoShield ($25) uses a thin prismlike
lens.
These
products sell mostly online, although some have
found their way to auto parts stores. PhotoBlocker,
for instance, is sold online at PhantomPlate.com
and at 10 independent auto supply dealers between
Baltimore and Centreville -- and at one car wash.
"It
sells okay. If I could sell it for $5, I could
sell a whole lot more," says Harold Berger,
owner of Kenilworth Car Wash in Hyattsville. "The
people who usually buy it have gotten tickets.
People don't want to spend $30 unless they got
burned. It's like paying for a ticket upfront,
only less."
Joe
Scott, marketing director for PhantomPlate,
the Alexandria firm that makes PhotoBlocker,
says about 100,000 cans have sold in four years.
And with traffic camera programs multiplying faster
abroad than in the United States, his product
is now sold on six continents. "Sales
have been phenomenal," he says.
The
big questions are: Do these products work,
and are they legal?
Former
Baltimore police officer Bob Kleebauer conducted
his own road test. Late one night in March, he
drove to the intersection where his wife got a
photo-radar ticket. His license plate coated with
PhotoBlocker, he waited until no cars were coming,
then ran the light.
He
took that "$75 chance" because he believes
red-light cameras are revenue traps targeting
decent people, says Kleebauer, now a telecom salesman.
"Ninety-nine percent of the drivers who get
caught are law-abiding citizens who do it accidentally.
You are approaching a yellow light and you have
a tenth of a second to brake or go. Make the wrong
decision and they got you."
His
test finding: "The flash went off behind
me, but I've never received a ticket."
The
Denver Police Department, at the behest of Fox
News, conducted a road test two years ago and
found that PhotoBlocker was effective, plate covers
less so. Similar results were found by TV news
programs in Great Britain, Australia and Sweden.
Five
Washington area police departments declined to
or didn't respond to requests that they conduct
roadside tests for The Washington Post. Those
who responded said they didn't have time and wouldn't
want to promote a product that may be illegal
or interferes with law enforcement.
"We'd
have to shut down the streets and traffic, and
all of our red-light cameras are at major intersections,"
says Capt. David Mellender of the Fairfax City
Police Department, which uses seven red-light
cameras. "And if it does work, we don't want
them to know about that."
Fairfax
County has 13 red-light cameras and plans to add
two more by year's end. Bud Walker, an officer
with the county's police department, says a field
test "could be seen as an endorsement, and
as a public institution we can't do that."
Despite
the television news tests, there's little consensus
about the effectiveness.
Speed
Measurement Laboratories -- consultants to police
departments and radar and radar-detector makers
worldwide -- has tested most products designed
to defeat photo enforcement, including car waxes
and stealth sprays that claim to make cars "invisible
to radar," photo-flash devices designed to
flash back at cameras and the high-gloss tag sprays.
"There's
a lot of good people in the industry who are honest
and a lot of charlatans. But it doesn't work,
that's the bottom line," says Carl Fors,
owner of the Fort Worth company.
The
bounce-back-the-flash concept does work sometimes,
he says, but only on positive images traffic cameras
produce. "If we reverse the image, go to
a negative image, we can read every letter on
a license plate," he says.
Fors
says the firms that make and operate radar camera
systems for municipalities routinely check negatives
of photos where license plates look unreadable.
"Going to the negative image is no big deal,"
he says.
PhotoBlocker's
Scott concedes that adjusting the images can "sometimes"
reveal the tag numbers, but "these companies
will just throw out anything that's questionable.
They don't want to have to dispute it in court
and it's not cost-effective for them."
Richard
Kosina, director of engineering at Affiliated
Computer Services, maker of most of the photo-radar
cameras active in the District, Maryland and Virginia,
says magnifying the image or adjusting brightness
and contrast to make glared or blurred plate numbers
legible is easy.
But,
he adds, those adjustments aren't usually necessary.
"In the case of sprays, we know they don't
work . . . and we've tested every spray that's
there," he says.
Says
Ray Reyer: "That's his perspective. There
have been cities and towns that have banned the
spray. Illinois just did. The reason they're doing
this is because they're losing revenue. Why else
would they?"
For
some law-abiding consumers, effectiveness may
be a moot point. Many jurisdictions insist that
such products are prohibited by laws that ban
obstructing license plates. Ads for such products
typically include a disclaimer about their legality.
Anne
Witt, director of the D.C. Department of Motor
Vehicles, thinks the products are "not legal
in the District." D.C. laws require that
license plates be "maintained free from foreign
materials and in a clearly legible condition"
and ban the attachment of anything that obstructs
any part of the tag. The "illegible tag"
fine is $50.
The
District's automated red-light and speed-enforcement
programs are in full gear. Red-light cameras,
now at 39 locations, have ticketed more than 450,000
drivers and collected $27 million in fines since
the program's inception in 1999, according to
the D.C. police Web site. The department's photo-radar
speeding program, using mostly mobile cameras,
has issued 993,000 tickets and collected more
than $53.6 million since it began in 2001 -- including
more than $10 million in 2004.
Virginia
outlaws anti-laser-radar covers and any cover
that obstructs the license plate, but the law
doesn't specify clear spray coatings. However,
Tim Murtaugh, spokesman for Attorney General Jerry
W. Kilgore, says state law bans "colored
glass, colored plastic or any other type of covering"
installed over a license plate in a way that alters
or obscures. "We believe this would apply"
to the sprays, he says.
Scott
argues that a loophole makes PhotoBlocker legal.
"The law says you cannot obstruct your license
plate," he says. "This spray only prevents
a flash camera from taking a picture. If you look
at it with the naked eye, you can't tell it's
on there."
But
Scott has another point to make: Even if laws
target anti-photo sprays, police would be hard-pressed
to identify who is using them. "There is
no way to identify which plates are coated and
which are not," he says.
©
2004 The Washington Post Company
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