Undercover probe reveals the 'buckets of money' made
from speed cameras (From the Mail on Sunday)
By DENNIS
RICE and WAYNE FRANCIS Last updated at 10:56am on
15th October 2006
Britain's booming speed camera network is at the centre
of a giant 'scam' aimed at making 'buckets of money' for the Government, the
boss of a leading supplier of the devices has admitted.
The sensational confession was made by the chief
executive of Tele-Traffic, which supplies cameras to virtually every police
force in Britain.
His unguarded comments, made to an undercover reporter
posing as a prospective buyer of speed cameras, will add new weight to the
public's perception that the gadgets are designed more for making money than
improving road safety.
The Tele-Traffic boss, Jon Bond, who was until a few
months ago the police Chief Superintendent in charge of speed cameras in
Warwickshire, urged our reporter to place an order and promised: 'There will be
so much money coming in you won't know what to do with it.'
He and his colleagues revealed how:
So many motorists are being snared that courts are
struggling to process the sheer volume of cheques sent to pay fines.
Tele-Traffic is run by former traffic police who offer
to introduce customers to currently serving officers willing to give advice on
the products.
The Government manipulates the speed camera system so
that the Treasury rakes in the multi-million-pound profits without the cash
going back to improve roads.
The Mail on Sunday posed as the London agents for an
Eastern European firm keen to establish a speed camera network in their own
country. We asked how the cameras operated in Britain - and the answers we
received will shock many, but also confirm the darkest suspicions of millions of
motorists.
The Tele-Traffic team encouraged our reporters to site
any cameras they bought where they could catch 'businessmen in the morning and
school-run mums in the afternoon.'
Setting up cameras in new areas was the equivalent of
having 'a blank cheque book', they said, guaranteeing 'when you first set up you
will have lots of offences, you will have bucketfuls'.
Britain's speed camera system is run by more than 40
regional road safety partnerships, made up of representatives from police,
courts and councils.
The partnerships are funded by the Department of
Transport, which demands that each region gives target figures for the number of
motorists they plan to catch speeding over the next year. If these targets are
not met, then Whitehall cuts the size of its funding.
This has the effect of making the local partnership set
low targets, rather than risk losing cash by falling short of predictions. And
that is good news for the Government, since the system is geared so that any
extra fines go to the Treasury.
Warwickshire, for example, had set a target of issuing
80,000 tickets in a year. Under the recently amended rules all the revenue from
the fines goes to central government, with a portion of it returned to local
authorities and to fund the road safety partnerships.
If Warwickshire only managed to catch 60,000 motorists,
then the local partnership would have to make good the shortfall itself so it
dare not undershoot. If, however, it fined 100,000 motorists, then all revenue
from the additional 20,000 fines would disappear to the Treasury.
So although it might appear that the Government's rules
are intended to encourage partnerships - to set low targets and therefore not
persecute an excessive number of motorists - the practical effect of them is to
ensure that the targets are regularly broken and more, rather than fewer,
motorists are ensnared.
And although it escapes any of the blame, the
Government picks up all the profits.
Further, partnerships that easily overshoot their
targets one year can set higher ones the next, so growing their empires.
Mr Bond claimed that the Government was so keen to
increase this revenue that it announced changes to the rules last year.
Instead of fines going directly to fund the
partnerships, that money will, from 2007, go direct to the Treasury. Whitehall
will then allocate funds for road safety to local authorities to use as part of
their general transport plan, in theory breaking the link between fines and
revenue.
'This was done so the Government wasn't perceived to be
revenue raising,' explained Mr Bond. 'But the reality is that the Government is
actually raking off even more money than before. They are giving less money to
the partnerships than they would have received through the old operation. So
it's all a scam - it's smoke and mirrors.
'The Treasury cannot lose and they get the cash while
the camera operators are the ones who get all the criticism. Brilliant, really.'
But successful partnerships do rake in increased
grants, enabling them to engage more staff, move into bigger premises and
methodically expand their empires. The result is an ever-burgeoning speed camera
industry in which central Government, local worthies and gadget suppliers all
have a stake. But it costs the motorist millions of pounds in fines, plus
immeasurable inconvenience.
Again, critics said yesterday, road safety is
forgotten. The speed camera system is a scandal that is all about hitting
targets, building local empires and raising money for Government.
Paul Smith, of the motorist organisation Safespeed,
said: 'This Mail on Sunday investigation has given us the first glimpse of the
secret society behind the world of camera partnerships and the private firms
which are picking up lucrative contracts from them.
'In Tele-Traffic you are showing us a company which has
become a virtual retirement home for police officers. I believe that now this
Pandora's box has been opened there will be more to come.'
Tele-Traffic UK supplies 97 per cent of the country's
police forces with portable laser cameras which are hand-held or set up in
special roving police vans.
Mr Bond's partners are Peter Gay, a former PC and now
the firm's customer service manager, and Mike Ricketts, another former
policeman.
Posing as foreign businessmen, The Mail on Sunday met
them over dinner in a Michelin-starred restaurant at a five-star hotel in the
Cotswolds.
At the beginning of the meeting the Tele-Traffic team
stressed the importance of speed cameras in promoting road safety. But then the
trio began to speak more openly about the 'revenue raising', truth behind the
cameras and that remained the dominant theme of the evening.
Mr Bond at least is well qualified in that respect.
Five years ago he set up the Warwickshire Safety Camera Partnership, which has a
website mockingly called 'smilecamera. co.uk'. But Mr Bond admitted that during
his tenure as chairman of the Warwickshire partnership the number of cameras in
that county doubled and the courts were swamped with cheques from speeding
motorists.
Mr Bond, who is due to address the annual conference of
the Association of Chief Police Officers this week, said: 'The beauty of the
mobile units we sell is their flexibility. They will catch businessmen going
into work in the morning and school-run mums in the afternoon.
'There will be so much money coming in you won't know
what to do with it.' Asked how Tele-Traffic could guarantee a return on the cost
of their cameras, Mr Gay laughed and said: 'You are going to get your revenue.
That, at the end of the day, is not a problem.'
Mr Bond said: 'The money will come in in buckets, a
promise repeated during the course of the evening by his colleagues, who also
spoke in terms of generating 'buckets' of money.
So much so, said Mr Bond, that the courts - which
process fines and issue the points on a driver's licence - have been struggling
to cope with all the cheques. Again, he made clear that the speed camera
industry was all about meeting targets rather than preventing accidents.
He said: 'It will be too much for you to cope with. It
will be too many offences - you won't be able to cope with them.
'In Warwickshire last year we issued 80,000 tickets
when we could probably have done double that number. But we couldn't because the
courts, which handle the fines, wouldn't have been able to cope.
'Imagine 80,000 cheques for £60 coming through your
door in a given year. They were swamped and we are the smallest of all the speed
partnerships.'
Mr Bond said that in his last year in Warwickshire he
deliberately sent officers out to quiet roads when the number of fines
approached the limit the courts could cope with an extraordinary story that
makes a mockery of the police's claim that speeding tickets are about safety.
'I had to send the camera operators out to roads where
they would only catch one or two people an hour,' he said.
Tele-Traffic sells basic hand-held laser speed cameras
for £3,000 and the directors told how this could be recovered from speeding
drivers in just an hour. Mr Gay said: 'Take the UK model of £60 a pop. If you
buy a piece of our kit at £3,000, then operate it in a two-hour session, on an
averagely busy road, you will catch about 100 drivers that's £6,000.
He also told how Tele-Traffic was expecting approval
from the DoT for a camera the company has developed which can trap motorists
from almost a mile away, raking in even more cash.
Tele-Traffic's business is not limited to the UK.
Ireland has bought more than 400 laser cameras from their company - and over
there, the government is quite open about using cameras to raise revenue.
Mr Ricketts said the Irish government had made an
election promise to reduce stamp duty and had made it clear they would make up
the lost revenue from speeding fines.
'We have produced for them a new system to make up that
revenue,' Mr Ricketts said. 'So they are going the opposite way to the UK
Government. They are actually openly promoting speed enforcement as their
revenue raiser.'
One thing Tele-Traffic appeared less open about was an
alarming discovery it made last year that thousands of motorists might have been
wrongly prosecuted for speeding. Mr Gay told how the son of the firm's founder,
another former chief superintendent, was caught speeding by a police officer
using one of the firm's lasers in a camera on the A14 last year.
He added: 'We looked into it and the officer operating
it had not been trained properly, which technically makes the prosecution
invalid. We told them that meant every prosecution over the previous five years
could also be invalid because of the absence of training. But they insisted on
prosecuting him anyway.'
Despite having a news section on its website,
Tele-Traffic never told the public about the 'unsafe', prosecutions and there is
no record of any of the police forces covering the A14 making any such
declaration either.
Happy that our meeting had gone well, Mr Bond and his
colleagues promised that it would be 'no problem', for them to introduce the
undercover reporters to serving policemen on the Warwickshire Safety Camera
Partnership and get hold of unpublished figures for how much the Treasury is
raking in from speed cameras.
Last night motorists campaign groups demanded an
inquiry.
Tony Vickers, of the Association of British Drivers,
said: 'Motorists have suspected for many years that the whole system is against
them - now we have the proof that it starts with the Labour Government and goes
downwards.
'While there is no evidence that any individual on the
partnerships profits from this, the truth of the matter is that it is enabling
certain police officers to build mini-empires which are completely unaccountable
to anyone but the Treasury.'
All this basically leaves me rather sad and feeling
sick
When I was a child there was a spate of child
abductions and I still remember reading on the back of a cornflakes packet the
usual warnings intended for youngsters.
There was also a picture of a policeman with a
caption “Here is a friend that you can trust”
What has gone wrong?
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