Speed Traps Alert: Worst 10 Cities

By Cornelius Nunev


Motorists could feel out-powered, with police able to use GPS and radar and the latest brand new gadgets to catch speeders. However, a new app may give the driver a chance to skirt law enforcement. Trapster alerts users to forthcoming dangers in the road, such as speed traps. Trapster and CNBC have put together a list of cities that have the most speed traps.

100,000 tickets supplied daily

About $6 billion is made annually from the 100,000 tickets that law enforcement officers hand out daily in the country.

To be able to make sure drivers know when there are speed traps, Trapster lets 15 million drivers report driving dangers in the online community.

Top of the list

The top of the list includes two locations that are fairly comparable. Both of them have a lot of driving challenges and red-light cameras to record it all. The police seem to be on the streets too. The number one listed area is New York City. Second is LA, California.

Cities in Texas

For speed traps in the country, Houston got the number 3 spot and Austin got the number 10 spot. It is the only state that got put on the list twice, which individuals anticipated depending on its strict law enforcement policies.

Vegas and DC

Number four and number five were given to Las Vegas and Washington, DC. Vegas got the spot because it has activities all night and all day long. AOL Auto points out that there are 349 red-light cameras in DC attributed to its spot:

"(It's) pretty hard to speed in one of the most congested cities in America, but rushing through yellow lights that turn red before you get across the intersection is a big source of city revenue."

Last areas talked about

The rest of the list incorporated, in order, St. Louis, Orlando, Chicago and Colorado Springs.

The legality of it

Many people are pondering how legal it is to notify others of speed traps and a law enforcement presence on online websites such as Trapster. We may get some information from a news report in Iowa where a law enforcement officer was asked.

Kevin Ward is the Ottumwa Police Sergeant. This is what he said:

"It could depend on what their intentions are, if they know that they're trying to do something that would interfere with what the officer is doing, they could. But once again, it's proving what their intent is."

Right now, the issue has not been taken to court. Until it has been, you are able to go to speedtrap.org to find speed traps inside your area.




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