There’s more than one way
to skin a cat if you are a Louisiana municipality in the business of financing
yourself by shaking down out-of-town motorists – even if it seems illegal.
After a year-long investigation,
state
officials lowered the boon on the top two police officials in Henderson,
part of whose town limits were extended a few years ago to patrol Interstate 10
around where the highway begins/ends its stretch over the Atchafalaya Basin,
for an alleged illegal scheme to kick back money to officers writing traffic
tickets. The more written, the more income from a state grant could be funneled
under the table.
Besides feathering their
own nests, another reason why a regime like this would be created is it helps
the town coffers as well. Previous to the middle of 2010, municipalities could
write up outrageous amounts for alleged speeding, but then R.S. 32:266 came into
force, which directed fine money for infractions 10 miles below the speed limit
on an interstate highway to the state for highway safety purposes for
municipalities not operating under a home rule charter.
The change spawned from a
Legislative Auditor’s report
that showed some municipalities were drawing huge proportions of their budgets
from these kinds of fines. Henderson was not identified as one such town because
it illegally had failed to turn over its financial figures. But the state’s
Office of the Inspector General discovered for the most recent year about $2.4
million collected by the town, 80 percent of its revenue, came from traffic
fines and subsequent forfeitures.
So it seems that, because the
town could not collect on the actual fines, these police officials found a way to
divert funds to employees, negating the need of the city to do so through legal
channels for compensation, and encouraged them to write more tickets, some of
which would be for infractions (real or imagined) other than speeding and thus
additionally line the city’s pocketbook that way. If only they had studied the
law a little more closely, following the example of another municipality, maybe
what is assumed to have happened never would have.
A little to the north,
another notorious speed trap about half of which’s revenues came from ticketing
according to the report, Washington, decided it needed to keep the gravy train
going. After a fruitless
effort to try to dodge enforcement of the new law, it simply adopted a home
rule charter, becoming the smallest municipality in the state to do so, thereby
exempting itself from the law.
Yet eyewitness testimony
asserts not everything is being done by the book here as well. One asserts
that Washington, who like many of the most egregious municipalities identified
in the report, gets assumed offenders to pay up front for a trial later, then
later quietly reduces the charges, with the promise of that action, which results
in insurance rates not affected negatively, as the enticement for motorists to
pay the fine immediately before determination of guilt or innocence.
These incidents underscore
the need for the Legislature to revisit the law. At the very least, the
exemption for chartered municipalities should be removed. Better would be
expanding the provision so that a sliding scale would impact the amount compared
to its total revenues that a municipality could collect from traffic
enforcement – as the proportion increases, a proportion remitted to the state
should increase as well. For example, if the total collected would be 80
percent of a town’s budget, then half collected would have to be remitted to
the state.
3 comments:
I got a speeding ticket last week on I-49 going 86 in a 75 (just 1 over the 10 limit). I called and they changed my ticket to a non-moving violation for the final price of $271.
$271 is a ridiculous fine for 11 over, much less a non-moving violation.
The root of the problem is that revenue for law enforcement is directly tied to the number of people they catch breaking the law, a system which encourages officers to see the citizens they swore to protect as cash cows.
Law enforcement is no longer about keeping the peace, but about securing enough funds at gunpoint to continue unjustly increasing salaries, benefits, and pensions which few in the private sector enjoy.
If cops were more interested in safety than revenue, they'd park their cars in plain sight to remind ALL drivers to slow down. Instead they hide and only convert one driver at a time.
It is literally highway robbery.
So you are complaining because you were speeding and got caught? Perhaps another way to ensure that these evil cops enforcing laws don't bother you would be for you to go the speed limit. I wonder if you just steal a little from a store , if that is ok too?
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