| _____ BEATING THE RADAR RAP _____ | |
| / / \ / / \ | |
| ( 5/5 ) Part 1 of 2 : "Your Day in Court" ( 5/5 ) | |
| \_/___/ \_/___/ | |
| by Dispater | |
| ______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| | | | |
| | Introduction | Welcome to the first of two parts in a series designed to | |
| |______________| inform you about some of the aspects (both legal and | |
| technical) concerning traffic radar. The second part will | |
| appear in Phrack 38. I recommend you read both parts before attempting to | |
| apply the information you learn from this file. | |
| Any hacker will tell you to ALWAYS find out as much as you possibly can about | |
| any endeavor and weigh the risks before you act. For most of us driving is | |
| something that we must do in order to have a career, get to school, and enjoy | |
| ourselves. Therefore it is essential to know the rules of the road and to know | |
| what will happen to you when you make a mistake. For the majority of us, this | |
| mistake means being given a speeding ticket or some type of moving violation. | |
| This file will explain how to handle the situation should you ever need to go | |
| to court over a speeding ticket. I intend to provide you with a basic | |
| background so that the odds are a little more even. | |
| One of the nasty things about traffic court is that for some reason, the burden | |
| of proof has flip-flopped from the state having to prove you are guilty (the | |
| way it is supposed to be) to the defendant having to prove that he/she is | |
| innocent. | |
| First of all you are not alone in your quest to seek justice. Most judges | |
| are not evil and hateful. If you come into court, neatly dressed (not fancy, | |
| just look like a "semi-normal" person.), well informed of the issue, courteous, | |
| and acting a little humbled by the experience, the judge may lean a little more | |
| to your side. If you go to court, you will see a number of idiots who will | |
| stand up in front of the judge and argue or say "I wasn't doin' nothin'. I was | |
| just bein' harassed. I'm right and this pig was wrong. Nyah!" Obviously, the | |
| judge will not take kindly to this type of behavior. Would you? | |
| In order to be informed, I HIGHLY recommend that you get in touch with the: | |
| National Motorists Association Membership: $20 student | |
| 6678 Pertzborn Rd. per year $35 everyone else | |
| Dane, WI 53529 | |
| Phone : 1-800-882-2785 | |
| The NMA provides a great deal of resources to those of use who drive. They | |
| provide (with membership) a legal resource kit for a rental fee of around | |
| $20.00 a month. This kit consists of 2 video tapes, 2 books, and a HUGE stack | |
| of information. Much of the "HUGE stack of information" consists of precedent | |
| cases in which the defense won, ALL radar gun manuals, lots of related news | |
| articles, error analysis information on vascar and other useful tidbits of | |
| information. It is excellent and I urge anyone who drives to get involved. | |
| The NMA, among other things, is the nice name for the "anti-55 people." They | |
| claim that it is up to the local governments and states to come up with their | |
| own speed limits. It's not Washington's job to tell the rest of us how to | |
| live! | |
| The last thing I want to mention is that this is NOT a comprehensive file. | |
| Reading this will NOT make you a lawyer. If you can afford a lawyer, hire one. | |
| It is intended for people like me who can't afford a lawyer but who have some | |
| intelligence and guile in their personal make up. There's more than one way to | |
| skin a cat (cop) and you should NOT take this as a word for word way to proceed | |
| if you get nabbed for speeding. I intend for this to be the basis for building | |
| a good foundation for a case and to give you some ideas on how you might want | |
| to proceed. Do not go into the court room half-cocked. A good lawyer always | |
| knows the outcome of a case before he steps into the court room. | |
| ______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| | | | |
| | You Get Busted! | So the red lights are blinking behind you and your radar | |
| |_________________| detector is going wild because you weren't paying | |
| attention because you were too busy messing with the radio | |
| and jamming to MC 900' Jesus so loudly that it shakes the widows of the car | |
| next to you. The first thing you want to do is pull over immediately! Don't | |
| try to be an bad ass and out run them. In most cases the cop's car can go | |
| faster than yours and besides, he has a radio. After you pull over, just hand | |
| him what ever he asks for and play in his desire to be "in control". | |
| Always say, "Yes sir" and "No sir" They LOVE that. Be as NICE as you can. | |
| Act "humbled". I know this may sound difficult but just TRY. ALL and I mean | |
| ALL people that become law enforcement officials have taken that job because | |
| they have some personality disorder that they NEED to feel in control of others | |
| and a NEED for others to respect them. This is a weakness in their | |
| personality, in my opinion. Anyway, If he just had a good round of golf that | |
| day, he may only write you a warning. If he still insists on writing you a | |
| ticket, he will at least know that you will not be a threat to him. ALL | |
| police officers, especially in large urban areas, will always approach your car | |
| as though you are going to shoot them. Make the officer thinks you are nice | |
| person (for the moment) and that your just weren't paying attention and you | |
| made a mistake. Again, as soon as you prove to him you are not a threat, he | |
| will relax and things will go much easier for you. I ALWAYS do this and the | |
| officer is actually NICE back to me most of the time. Even though his first | |
| impression is "long haired kid in a hot rod car wearing a Metallica shirt," the | |
| encounter usually ends with a "Have a nice day." or a "Just make sure you be | |
| careful now. ok?" | |
| NOTE: If you are pulled over by a bull-dyke female cop, you are totally | |
| fucked. Social engineering is totally useless. ALL and I mean ALL bitch cops | |
| are just looking to prove something. They have a bad attitude because the "old | |
| boy" network back at the station doesn't like them and they think that most | |
| males will look on them as less of an authority figure merely because they are | |
| female, if they do not compensate (overcompensate) for the fact that they are | |
| women. They think that they will be challenged more often than not by you. I | |
| have yet to ever meet a NICE female cop. Lets face it, if they were NICE they | |
| would probably be an attorney or something. If you are women police officer | |
| reading this and you are not like what I have just described in the above | |
| paragraph then just ignore it and tell your cohorts to adjust the attitude! | |
| Continuing on...As you are sitting there with everyone slowing down to take a | |
| look at you, make note of EVERYTHING! Write down the following: | |
| 1) Location (intersections, curves, condition of the road) | |
| 2) Weather (rain, fog, snow : all hinder traffic radar) | |
| 3) Traffic and all types of vehicles present (large trucks?) | |
| 4) Time (rush hour?) | |
| 5) Buildings present (airport? radio station? bank? microwave towers? | |
| power lines? hospital? telephone office?) | |
| 6) Officer's attitude (if he's angry this will play in your favor later) | |
| 7) Etc (anything else I failed to list here) | |
| _____________________________________________________________________________ | |
| | | | |
| | Your Ticket and Pre-Trial Experiences | So. Now in your possession you have | |
| |_______________________________________| a little gift from whomever had a | |
| bad day at work. The first thing | |
| you will want to do is make sure that all the information on the ticket is | |
| correct. If it is not, make sure that you take note of this and be sure to | |
| mention it as soon as your trial begins! You might be able to get off on a | |
| technicality. Another thing to check for is to make sure that the officer | |
| didn't write any little messages to the judge on the back of the ticket. If he | |
| wrote "radar detector." or some other irrelevant evidence, make sure you point | |
| out to the judge that that the speeding ticket is inadmissible as evidence in | |
| court due to the fact that it contains information that does not pertain to the | |
| case. The idea behind this is that most people that are caught speeding have | |
| radar detectors. Therefore, the cop will try to play on this fact in an | |
| indirect way. Even though this evidence is irrelevant, he will attempt to | |
| submit it. If the judge is cool, you'll get off on a technicality. Other ways | |
| to get off on technicalities is to make sure that EVERY tidbit of information | |
| is CORRECT. Incorrect information is a great way to get off. This is a | |
| "procedural error" and might get the case dismissed. Continuing on.... | |
| Ok, so the ticket says you have to appear in court December 21st at 4:00. All | |
| this means is that if you wish to pay the ticket you must do so by this time | |
| and date. This does not usually mean you will actually go to court on this | |
| date. What you do next is go to the clerk's office and hand the lady behind | |
| the counter the ticket and say that you wish to contest it. They will set up | |
| a date (usually much later in the year sometimes a YEAR LATER if things are | |
| really backed up) and give you a piece of paper that you must bring to court | |
| with you. I highly suggest to everyone to ALWAYS, ALWAYS, ALWAYS contest a | |
| ticket. Hell, you have to pay court fees whether you show up or not so you | |
| might as well go, right? The point is to make them work for your money! | |
| One good plan of action is to go to court a few weeks ahead of time and observe | |
| how proceedings work in your local court room. Just tell the bailiff that you | |
| are a criminal justice major and want to see how traffic court works and | |
| observe what REALLY goes on instead of reading it in a text book. If you are | |
| really clever, you might just want to ask one of the cops if you can go out and | |
| watch how police officers bust people speeding. Use the oldest, most classic | |
| social engineering maneuver ever invented, "It's for a paper for class." Let | |
| them think you are interested in becoming a cop. I don't care what they do or | |
| who they are, if someone comes up to them and appears to take interest in their | |
| profession, they will always be flattered. Always flatter the hell out of | |
| anyone you want to engineer! | |
| The first thing you want to do before actually going to court yourself, is | |
| to not go to court. About a week before the trial or less, call the clerk's | |
| office and ask for a "continuance." Tell them that your boss told you that | |
| you have to go out of town the day of the trial and they will schedule you | |
| a new trail date. This is important because most police officers are less | |
| willing to show up. Thus if he's not there to prosecute you, you get off! | |
| _____________________________________________________________________________ | |
| | | | |
| | Here come de Judge! Here come de Judge! | Ok, so you're now sitting there | |
| |__________________________________________| in the presence of the other poor | |
| idiots that are in a similar | |
| predicament as you are. As you are sitting there sweating your ass off (being | |
| this is your first time in court, hopefully) Make sure you make note of other | |
| people's cases. What do the officers say when someone mentions traffic radar? | |
| See above above paragraph about testing the water a little. I have obtained a | |
| ton of information on how departments REALLY operate when they know I'm not | |
| there to pressure them. Use the lame statements the officers make against | |
| other officers and the rest of the department, when it's your turn. One time, | |
| before it was my turn I watched this one cop say, "The radar units are | |
| calibrated by the manufacturer and sent to us." Needless to say, I won that | |
| case! | |
| Now the bailiff calls out, STATE OF TEXAS v. MR. OFFENDER! By this time you | |
| should know the routine. As soon as the judge opens things up to you ask | |
| him/her if you can examine the witness. They will say, "yes." Here is where | |
| you begin to make your case. | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| PRELIMINARY QUESTIONS : "What?!?!?!" This is what the cop has going on inside | |
| his head right now. You are no longer the innocent fool you appeared to be in | |
| your car? He immediately raises his guard and you must lower it my placing a | |
| few questions to him and wearing him down. This part of the questioning is | |
| done to see if he can remember the exact circumstances under which he pulled | |
| you over and to get him used to you taking control of the interrogation. | |
| A. What type of radar were you using on the date the citation was issued? | |
| - Make sure he gives you the model name and number. Answers like "traffic | |
| radar or Doppler radar" should not be permitted. | |
| B. Please relate the facts concerning the citation as you remember them. | |
| - Make note if anything differs from what you remember to be true. | |
| C. Was your audio doppler engaged at the time the citation was issued? | |
| - If he says he doesn't know what that is, he hasn't been trained! The hand | |
| held units. (Speedgun series don't have audio doppler!) This is a good | |
| question to trip him up on! If he says he had it engaged, merely whip out | |
| the manual and ask him if to point out where the heck it is. OR you can | |
| ask to subpoena the unit to court and ask him to find it! | |
| D. What speed was your audio alarm set for? | |
| - If he says he doesn't know what that is, he hasn't been trained! | |
| E. Was your automatic speed lock engaged? | |
| - If yes, you have already started to build your case that they made an | |
| error. If not then keep going. | |
| F. Were you stationary or moving at the time your radar unit's alarm went off? | |
| - Who cares unless you want to go off and provide some kind of "cosine-error" | |
| evidence later. | |
| G. Was I coming toward you or away from you? | |
| - Again, this doesn't matter | |
| H. Did you see me prior to the time your radar's audio alarm went off? | |
| - This is important, you are in effect asking him if he took a traffic | |
| history before he set up camp behind the bushes waiting to pop people. | |
| I. Could you estimate my speed? | |
| Irrelevant | |
| J. What was the apparent speed? | |
| Irrelevant | |
| K. How many seconds did it take you to react between the time you first saw | |
| my vehicle and the time your audio alarm sounded? | |
| - This doesn't matter, unless it was a case of you coming around a curve or | |
| over a hill and old Smokey is there waiting to bust the first thing that | |
| makes his little machine go beep. He must have tracked you long enough to | |
| get a good reading. This should be about 5-8 seconds to take into account | |
| spurious readings. If he didn't wait that long he is ignoring his | |
| training. | |
| L. Using this paper could you make a map of the area? | |
| - Most of the time to police officer will be unable to remember details of | |
| the surroundings since he hands out many tickets a day. This is a good | |
| place to establish doubt. | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| ESTABLISH THE OFFICER'S LEVEL OF QUALIFICATIONS: This is done in an attempt to | |
| make the police officer appear as unqualified as possible. Make the officer | |
| appear to have as little training as possible and be as unfamiliar with the | |
| radar unit as possible. The bigger a fool you can make the cop out to be the | |
| more points you'll score with the judge. | |
| A. How long have you been a police officer? | |
| Irrelevant unless he's just come straight from the academy | |
| B. How long have you been operating radar? | |
| Irrelevant unless it's a year or less. | |
| C. Have you received formal training on the operation of radar? | |
| - If NO then you've hit pay-dirt. | |
| D. Under what circumstances did you receive this training? | |
| Irrelevant unless he says, "in the locker room." In this case he may be | |
| on your side. | |
| E. How many hours of classroom training did you receive? | |
| - This is an important answer. If he says four or less, he's probably not | |
| qualified. Make note. | |
| F. How long ago did you receive this training? | |
| Irrelevant unless the answer is five or six years ago. He may be out of | |
| practice and probably wasn't trained on the model he used to bust you. | |
| G. Who taught the class? | |
| - If it was his sergeant, you have a case of the blind leading the blind. If | |
| it was the radar manufacturer you have a potentially biased source since | |
| the manufacturer will do anything to sell it's merchandise! If he was SENT | |
| to the manufacturer's school he's better than most. | |
| H. Since initial training, have you had any brush-up courses? | |
| - If he says yes, he's full of more shit than you are. Ask who taught them | |
| and when they were. | |
| I. Do you believe yourself to be a competent radar operator? | |
| - Sure he does | |
| J. Do you hold a certification? | |
| - In some states he MUST be trained at the manufacturer's school. If he says | |
| his sergeant certified him. You may be able to walk out of court right | |
| there. It's a case of the blind leading the blind. | |
| K. Did you receive your initial training with the model (the one he popped you | |
| with)? | |
| - If his formal training was with another unit, you've hit pay-dirt again! | |
| L. How many one-on-one sessions of field training did he receive? | |
| - Answers like, "I rode with another officer while he wrote tickets." are not | |
| good. Keep pressing him on this issue. Most likely he did not have this | |
| type of training unless it was done by a factory representative and then | |
| there were three other officers in the car at the time. | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| ESTABLISH THE LEVEL OF TRUST THE OFFICER PLACES IN HIS RADAR: These questions | |
| are used in an attempt to make it appear as though the police officer himself | |
| questions the reliability of traffic radar. This is where things get fun and | |
| he could even purger himself if he's not careful. In which case you win again! | |
| A. Do you believe the (radar unit he popped you with) to be a good unit? | |
| - Of course he does. If he doesn't he may be on your side. | |
| B. Have you ever encountered problems with the (model) radar? | |
| - If he says yes, make sure he tells you details, and not simply, "It quit | |
| working one day." | |
| C. Are you permanently assigned to one specific radar unit? | |
| - They will always switch around. He will most likely say that he uses the | |
| same brand name but different models. | |
| D. Do you believe there to be differences between brands of radar units or | |
| models? Will one have idiosyncrasies that others may not have? | |
| - He will most likely say that they all work alike. If he says he has | |
| differences make sure he tells you exactly what they are and how he noticed | |
| them. | |
| E. Do you believe that the (model radar) ever gives spurious or false readings? | |
| - If he says "no." Make sure you have documented evidence of this. (see | |
| above information on the NSA) This is a real good way to make him look | |
| like an idiot. Make sure that you repeat the question and emphasis the | |
| word "NEVER." After he says no again, hand the document to the judge and | |
| say something to the effect that, "I have written evidence right here that | |
| was written by an independent engineering firm that proves that (model | |
| radar) does have the capability to give false readings. Now, in a court | |
| of law you are not permitted to defend yourself while examining the | |
| witness, however, since you are not an attorney. The judge may permit you | |
| do submit your testimony. | |
| If the officer says "yes" he has seen false readings, ask him what | |
| percentage of the time it does give spurious readings. In the case | |
| STATE OF WISCONSIN vs HANSEN, in which HANSEN prevailed. It was proven | |
| that radar can give false readings up to 20% of the time. | |
| F. Do you believe you can always tell the radar unit is giving a spurious | |
| reading? | |
| - He will always say he can. If he says, "no" then you've already | |
| established reasonable doubt. When he says "yes," then proceed with the | |
| next two questions and then come back to this one again. | |
| G. Is there is a special number that appears on the screen that indicates a | |
| false reading. | |
| - Not! | |
| H. Does the unit give some visual indication that the reading is suspected to | |
| be false? | |
| - Not! (Believe it or not! The very first case I went to defend myself, | |
| the idiot cop said that there was an "indicator light that noted when | |
| there is radar disturbance in the area." HAHAHAHA!!! What a joke. | |
| I asked him to point it out to me and of course he couldn't. Therefore | |
| he just lied under oath. He fucked himself hard! Needless to say the | |
| judge wasn't too pleased, to see a police officer lying either! ;-) | |
| I. How then can you tell that the reading you are getting is spurious? | |
| - He will answer that there is no target or that the car is obviously not | |
| speeding. | |
| J. You said that there isn't some special speed or number that appears on the | |
| screen. All 86 mph speed readings are not spurious for example? | |
| - Of course not. | |
| K. So the spurious reading could be either 20mph or 70mph? | |
| - Of course. If he says not, he is out of his league and attempting to | |
| evade answers. | |
| L. The radar could give a speed of 20mph or 70mph, but you could see clearly, | |
| for example, that the car was going only 30mph? | |
| - He should agree with that. | |
| M. What if a car was going 55mph and you got a reading of 70mph? Is this | |
| possible? | |
| - He should agree with that. | |
| N. Assuming a car was approaching you at 55mph. You could recognize that? | |
| - He'll probably say he could. If he does, keep going. If he says he could | |
| not then you've already established doubt. | |
| O. If a car was approaching at 55mph and you get a reading of 56mph. Could | |
| you tell that it was a spurious reading? | |
| - Of course not. At this point keep the pressure on by rapidly asking the | |
| question over and over again and increasing the false reading by one mph | |
| until he gives. If you've led the cop into this trap you are doing great! | |
| He is totally fucked if he answers either "yes" or "no." This is because | |
| you are establishing more doubt each time he says "no" and if he does say | |
| "yes" too soon he will appear to have some super-human quality! | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| USE OF AUDIO DOPPLER, AUDIO ALARM, AND AUTOMATIC SPEED LOCK: All radar units | |
| include features designed to make the officer's job easier. The AUDIO DOPPLER | |
| can be turned down or off, as is usually done, therefore it contributes nothing | |
| to reliability. The AUDIO ALARM is a warning tone that tells the officer the | |
| radar unit has "got one", and it is built into all radar units. The officer | |
| must dial in a speed above which he wants the alarm to sound. The only way | |
| to disengage the alarm is to dial the speed to 99 mph or 199 mph on some | |
| models. The AUTOMATIC SPEED LOCK is the worst thing ever put in a radar unit. | |
| It automatically locks up a speed reading when one comes above the preset | |
| level. If the reading is spurious, the officer never knows it. Your goal here | |
| is to establish his normal operating habits. Later, you'll find out how he was | |
| using radar on the day he busted you. | |
| A. Does your radar unit have an audio Doppler? That is a continuous audio | |
| single tone which converts the radar unit's Doppler shift into an audible | |
| signal? | |
| - He will say his unit does, unless it's a Speedgun, in which case it | |
| does not. If it was a Speedgun jump to question "M". | |
| B. Does the audio doppler have a volume control? | |
| - Yes it does. | |
| C. Do you ever use your audio doppler? | |
| - If he says "yes" continue. If he says no skip to question `M`. | |
| D. About what percent of the time will you listen to the audio doppler? | |
| - note percent | |
| E. When you operate your radar unit with audio doppler on do you operate it | |
| at full volume? | |
| Heh, yea right! | |
| F. At what volume do you operate it? | |
| - The question can only be helpful if he says he operates it at a low volume. | |
| Try to ask him a few similar questions that will make him answer "low | |
| volume." IE: "I know that that tone get's awfully annoying doesn't it?" | |
| G. Do you ever turn it off? | |
| - Sure he does. | |
| H. Why do you turn it off? | |
| - Because it is irritating as hell! | |
| I. Does the use of audio doppler ever interfere with your use of the police | |
| radio or your conversations with other officers? | |
| - He should say it does. | |
| J. So you operate with the audio doppler off about ___ percent of the time? | |
| - Fill in the number that he gave you earlier. | |
| K. Of the rest of the time, how often do you operate it with the volume on | |
| soft. | |
| - (Note the percentage) | |
| L. Do you consider the audio doppler an important tool to prevent operator | |
| error? | |
| - Only important if he says "no". | |
| M. Is your radar unit equipped with a dial that lets you select a speed above | |
| which an audio tone will sound if a violation speed is picked up? | |
| - Yes, all radar units have this feature. | |
| N. We'll call that feature the AUDIO ALARM. Do you commonly use that feature? | |
| - He has to. | |
| O. What percentage of the time do you use this? | |
| - If he answers anything less than 100%, ask him how he disengages it. He | |
| would have to disassemble the whole radar unit. | |
| P. If the speed limit on a highway is 55, what speed do you normally dial in | |
| as your pre-set violator speed? | |
| - Note speed. The answer isn't critical. | |
| Q. Do you find that feature to be a useful one for you? | |
| - He'll probably say it's sometimes useful. | |
| R. If a violation speed causes the alarm to sound, you need only reach over to | |
| lock in that speed, is that correct? | |
| - That's how it works. | |
| S. Does your radar unit also have a button or switch which permits the radar | |
| unit to automatically lock up the violation speed? | |
| - Yes, it does. | |
| T. Do you ever use that automatic speed lock function? | |
| - If he says "no", repeat the question with an emphasis on the "ever" and | |
| look skeptical. If he still says no, skip to the next question section. | |
| U. About what percent of the time do you use the automatic speed lock? | |
| - Note percent. | |
| V. Do you find that automatic speed lock convenient? | |
| - Sure he does. That way he can read a magazine or take a nap while the radar | |
| unit does the for him! | |
| W. Do you use the automatic speed lock for any other reason? | |
| - Note reasons, if any. | |
| X. Was the use of the automatic speed lock included in your training? | |
| - Answer isn't important. | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| ESTABLISHING WHETHER THE OFFICER USES A VISUAL BACK UP: When cops go to court, | |
| they have a "model testimony" used to establish their reasoning for giving out | |
| a ticket. One part of this testimony usually centers on the radar unit used | |
| only as a backup to their visual perception that you, the defendant, were | |
| traveling at a "high rate of speed" or at "X mph." Put in it simplest form, | |
| this is total hogwash. A trained officer can make a visual identification of | |
| speed at a distance of perhaps 500 feet. The radar can theoretically make that | |
| same speed determination at 5000 feet. The radar's alarm will sound many | |
| seconds before the policeman can make a visual speed determination. As it is, | |
| the cop will observation of a car will verify what the radar has already told | |
| him. THIS IS WRONG! The law states that "radar readings can ONLY be used as | |
| corroborative evidence." If the cop sees that the car is traveling slower than | |
| what the radar says, he will merely assume that the driver saw him and slowed | |
| down. The following questions are used to establish whether or not the cop did | |
| use visual back up, and trap him onto making a statement which can later be | |
| used against him! | |
| A. I'm going to start this question by defining a term I call a "traffic | |
| history". A traffic history is the continuous observation of traffic by a | |
| police officer. If an officer takes a traffic history, it means he is | |
| CONTINUALLY WATCHING TRAFFIC; looking for speeders, drunken drivers, or any | |
| other offenders. Do you understand what I mean by a traffic history? | |
| - If the officer doesn't understand, keep explaining until he does. | |
| B. With regard to speeding tickets, an officer who says he normally takes a | |
| traffic history can say that he observes traffic patterns for a period of | |
| several seconds -- usually three to five seconds -- before he sees what he | |
| believes to be a speeding incident. That is, three to five seconds before | |
| his radar unit sounds its alarm. He then continues to observe traffic fora | |
| period of several seconds while he determines that a citation should be | |
| issued. Do you understand that definition of a traffic history as it | |
| applies to speeding tickets? | |
| - The officer should understand. | |
| C. Using that definition, have you EVER taken a traffic history prior to | |
| issuing a speeding citation? | |
| - He will probably answer that he has. If he says no, see answer E. | |
| D. About what percent of the time can you say you have taken a traffic history | |
| when you issue a speeding ticket? | |
| - Note percent. It will probably be very high. | |
| E. Do you believe it is important to take a traffic history in speeding cases? | |
| - He'll probably say "yes." If he says no, you have a strong argument in | |
| court, namely that he had no visual backup; that he was relying solely on | |
| his radar unit. His "yes" answer, in conjunction with the fact that he | |
| didn't take one in your case, can be used against him in court. | |
| F. At about what distance can you make a determination that a car is doing a | |
| certain number of miles per hour? | |
| - Most policemen answer about 500. If he hedges or says it depends, set up a | |
| specific situation, for example, he is in the median strip of a level, | |
| straight, uncrowded highway. At what distance can he make a visual | |
| determination of the speed of an approaching car? If he says he still | |
| can't say, throw the 500 feet figure at him and see if he agrees. Shorten | |
| and lengthen the figure to get an estimate he can live with. | |
| G. When you take this traffic history and make a visual assumption about speed, | |
| you do so BEFORE your radar unit has sounded its audio alarm? | |
| - THIS IS A TRICK QUESTION. If he says "yes", he's in trouble because his | |
| radar unit's range is doubtlessly longer than his visual acuity. | |
| If he says "no", then he hasn't really taken a traffic history. | |
| If he says "yes", ask questions H and I. | |
| If he says "no", ask questions J, K, L, M, N, and O, P, Q, R. | |
| H. Approximately what is the range of your radar unit? | |
| - He'll probably say he doesn't know. Throw figures between 3,000 and 5,000 | |
| feet at him and see if he agrees with any of them. If he still doesn't | |
| know, ask if he'd be surprised to find out that his radar unit had a range | |
| of at least 3,000 feet. If he says yes to that question, you have just | |
| nailed him on a vital technical question. | |
| I. But you still stick to your statement that the radar unit does not sound an | |
| alarm prior to your being able to recognize the true velocity of a car? | |
| - Regardless of his answer, you've made your point. | |
| J. Then you don't really take a traffic history. | |
| - The neatest answer is "no", which he probably won't say. Instead, he'll | |
| say that sometimes it does and sometimes it doesn't. For the "sometimes it | |
| doesn't" answers, go back to questions H and I. For the "sometimes it | |
| does" answer, continue. | |
| K. If the radar unit sounds an alarm before you've had a chance to ascertain | |
| that a car is speeding, how can you say you've taken a traffic history? | |
| - He'll probably say it alerts him to look for a speeder. | |
| L. Do you look down to see how fast the radar unit says a car is going? | |
| - He'll probably he looks. If he says he doesn't look, tell him, "but you | |
| know a car is definitely going at least X mph over the speed limit?" To | |
| that, he has to answer yes. | |
| M. Does the knowledge that the radar unit has already "got one" influence your | |
| judgement in making a visual determination of a car's speed? That is, will | |
| you be more likely to agree that a car is going a certain number of miles | |
| per hour after the radar has already said that it was going that speed? | |
| - He should agree. If he doesn't, ask him why he doesn't just run his alarm | |
| setting up to 99 mph to make certain it never influences his judgement? | |
| His answer won't matter. | |
| N. Would you be more inclined to believe that a car in the left lane of a four- | |
| lane highway was a speeder if you heard your audio alarm go off? | |
| - If he's honest, he'll say yes. If he isn't, he'll say, "if it was passing | |
| another vehicle". Counter with "what if there wasn't a reference vehicle | |
| present, but the car was still in the left lane? If he still says "no", | |
| ask him again why he doesn't just run his alarm counter up to 99 mph. | |
| O. If there was a car going slower than the speed limit in the right lane, and | |
| a car driving at the speed limit in the left lane apparently passing it, and | |
| your radar unit either malfunctioned or misread the target, might you | |
| mistakenly conclude that the car in the left lane was speeding and issue the | |
| driver a citation? | |
| - If he's honest, he'll answer "yes", building your case for operator error. | |
| If he says "no", he could tell the car in the left lane wasn't speeding, | |
| you're back to question F. | |
| P. If your radar unit said it had picked up a car going, say, 70 mph, and when | |
| you were able to make out its speed, it was clearly going the speed limit, | |
| would you be inclined to believe the motorist had seen you and quickly | |
| slowed down? | |
| - The honest officer will say yes. | |
| Q. Would you still issue the citation based on the radar reading? | |
| - Again, he should say "yes". | |
| R. Why do you set your alarm counter for a certain number of miles per hour | |
| over the speed limit? | |
| - His answer may be that he was trained to do so (unusable), or that he needs | |
| it for special circumstances (worth following up). Any excuse will be | |
| lame. | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| ESTABLISHING THE LEVEL OF KNOWLEDGE ABOUT BEAM WIDTH AND RANGE: Under | |
| HONEYCUTT, a police officer does not need to know the inner workings of his | |
| radar unit in order to have his testimony accepted by the court. The mistake | |
| is made by many persons challenging radar-backed speeding citations is to try | |
| and demonstrate to the court that they know more about radar than the cop that | |
| issued them a ticket. | |
| It really doesn't matter how much you know about radar. All the court wants to | |
| know is how much the officer knows. Few judges have ever questioned the | |
| qualifications of the citing officer. Your job as a defendant is to make the | |
| judge do just exactly that! You will have to plant a seed of doubt in his/her | |
| mind by showing that in several key areas, the officer doesn't know fundamental | |
| aspects of radar. | |
| A. With respect to everyday operation of your radar unit, do you know what its | |
| approximate range is? | |
| - Depending on the model, the answer can range from 3,000 to 7,000 feet. | |
| Refer to second article in this series that will appear in the next | |
| exciting issue of Phrack! | |
| B. At a distance of 1000 feet how wide is the radar beam? | |
| C. About how far from the radar antenna will the beam be when it is width of | |
| one lane of traffic, or about 11 feet? | |
| D. With what degree of certainty can you point your radar's antenna at, say, | |
| the left lane of oncoming traffic and at a distance of, say, 500 feet | |
| be focusing on just that lane of traffic? | |
| - The answer is zero. Anything else and he is wrong. | |
| E. In the stationary mode, you can lock the speed of traffic in either | |
| direction, that is, you can flip the antenna to record traffic going away | |
| from you or traffic coming toward you. Is that correct? | |
| - Yes it is. | |
| F. Can your radar differentiate between traffic direction? For example, if | |
| you're setting along a expressway, and you have your radar unit pointed | |
| toward you oncoming traffic, will your radar unit pick up only oncoming | |
| traffic, or might it also pick up traffic on the other side of the median | |
| strip moving away from you? | |
| - It will pick up traffic in either direction. Any other statement (e.g. | |
| "sometimes it does and sometimes it doesn't" is ignorance.) | |
| G. In moving mode, can your radar pick up traffic both coming toward you and | |
| traffic moving away from you? | |
| - The Speedgun 8 is the ONLY radar that can do this. It can only clock cars | |
| coming toward it. No other radar unit can do this! | |
| H. [In the next two questions you will have to draw a picture. Draw a vertical | |
| roadway with a car (#) going up toward the top and the cops car | |
| | . | oriented perpendicular to the road (<:=). Next draw a line that is | |
| | . | perpendicular to the roadway (<---). This is the radar beam. You | |
| | . | should have a slightly larger drawing :) that looks similar to | |
| <-------<:= the one to the left. Hold this up so that the judge and the cop | |
| | . | can see it and ask the following question.] | |
| | .^| | |
| | .#| | |
| In this diagram, the radar is held at right angles to the roadway. A north | |
| bound car driving at 55mph enters into the radar beam. Will the radar unit | |
| pick up the car? | |
| - It cannot. There is NO doppler shift because there is no closing speed | |
| between the vehicle and the radar unit. If he answers correctly, skip to | |
| question "J". | |
| I. [Again you need to draw a picture similar to the one above, but this time | |
| add a car going in the opposite direction, in the other lane of course! | |
| It should look something like the picture below. Now present this to the | |
| cop and the judges and ask the following: (Refer to this as | |
| |#. | fig. `2`)] | |
| |~ | | |
| | . | | |
| <-------<:= | |
| | . | | |
| | .^| | |
| | .#| | |
| In this diagram, two cars are approaching from opposite directions, with the | |
| radar unit sill pointed at right angles on the highway. The north bound car | |
| (right) is going 55mph. The southbound car (left) is going 65mph. Which | |
| car will the radar unit pick up and how will you be able to distinguish | |
| between the two? | |
| - If he even thinks about answering this question he is an idiot. Neither | |
| car will register. (see question `H`) | |
| J. What kind of things will stop the beam? Will underbrush stop the beam or | |
| can you get a reading through tall grass, weeds, and bushes? | |
| - Radar will go through these things. | |
| K. Are there circumstances under which you can obtain the speed of a vehicle | |
| you cannot see? For example, can you obtain the speed of a vehicle around | |
| a corner or over a hill? | |
| - Not in this world. | |
| L. Will your radar beam bounce off a metal surface such as a sign, a car, | |
| a ,metal building, or a steal or concrete overpass? | |
| - Sure will. | |
| M. What happens to the beam when it bounces off a metal object? Could it pick | |
| up the speed of a car at an angle to the direction you have the radar | |
| pointed? | |
| - Yes it will. | |
| N. Could a high power utility transmission line interfere with the radar unit? | |
| - Yup. | |
| O. Could airport radar or military radar interfere with the radar? | |
| - Sure can. | |
| P. Have you ever noticed interference from things like neon signs or street | |
| lights? | |
| - Such things do produce interference | |
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | |
| FINAL QUESTIONS: By now you have either made a enemy of the officer (most | |
| likely outcome) or started him thinking about the incident (if he is a good | |
| police officer). The officer, of course, doesn't know what answers he got | |
| right and what ones he got wrong. Watch for variations between answers, or | |
| especially, any weakening in his determination that yours was the car which | |
| registered on the radar unit. | |
| Questions `N`-`Q` taken together represent critical procedural questions. It | |
| is important to differentiate between an internal calibration check (pushing a | |
| button) and an external check (holding a tuning fork to the antenna). | |
| A. Officer (such and such), let's go back over your recollection of the | |
| incident one last time. Can you relate the facts concerning the citation | |
| as you remember them? | |
| B. Was your audio Doppler engaged at the time of the incident? How loud or | |
| soft was it? | |
| C. What speed was your audio alarm set for? Had you moved it up or down | |
| during your shift? | |
| D. Was your automatic speed lock engaged? | |
| E. Were you using a manual on-off switch? | |
| F. Were you in a stationary or moving mode at the time? | |
| G. Was the defendant coming or going away from you? | |
| H. Did you see other vehicles either in front of or behind the defendant? | |
| Were they varied in size? Were they varied in direction of travel? | |
| I. Was there traffic moving in the same direction as you? (if moving) | |
| J. Did you see the defendant prior to the time your audio alarm sounded? | |
| K. Were you able to obtain an approximate speed reading based on your | |
| visual identification? What was your point of reference? | |
| L. How many seconds elapsed between the time you first observed the defendant | |
| and the time your audio alarm sounded? | |
| M. Were there any power lines in the area? Cars or homes with CB antennas? | |
| Buildings with two-way radio antennas? Had you been talking on your radio? | |
| N. Regarding calibration of the radar unit, using the INTERNAL calibration | |
| function, at what times before and after the citation did you check the | |
| radar? | |
| O. Using an "external tuning fork", at what times before and after the citation | |
| did you check your radar? | |
| P. In your estimation, what is the difference between the internal and external | |
| calibration function? | |
| Q. Do you consider one of the calibration checks to be a more accurate | |
| indicator of accuracy? Which one? | |
| ______________________________________________________________________________ | |
| | | | |
| | Closing Arguments | If you have done well you will have established a great | |
| |____________________| deal of doubt in the judges mind as to the capability | |
| of the officer in question to operate a radar unit. | |
| You have have set him/her thinking about the "big picture." That is, "Just how | |
| accurate is traffic radars?" This is what you want to achieve but it must be | |
| done in subtle way. | |
| You aren't out of the hole yet! Now that you have established doubt in the | |
| judge's mind you MUST provide testimony that will TIE all the testimony the | |
| officer gave in with YOURS. This is where you have to do the thinking on your | |
| own. It should be very obvious how to do this. Your job is to break down | |
| the testimony. You are looking for 1) Procedural errors, 2) Lack of knowledge | |
| on the part of the officer, 3) Possible radars errors. If you can get him | |
| on two of the three, you are set! | |
| Procedural errors include things like the previously mentioned incorrect | |
| citation. Other procedural errors that are easy to play on is this. The | |
| officer must use an external tuning that is certified as to it's accuracy in | |
| testing the radar unit immediately before he gives a citation. Two court cases | |
| that are examples of this are WISCONSIN v. HANSEN and MINNESOTA v. GERDES. | |
| Simply put, if you are in need of throwing around some weight in court, just | |
| cite these two cases. They are great! | |
| Ignorance on the part of the officer is pretty obvious. If he messes up the | |
| questions, he is ignorant. They are all pretty simple, I think. If a cop does | |
| things like, uses his automatic speed lock or doesn't use his audio doppler, he | |
| is blatantly ignoring his training. Most of the time they will bring a copy of | |
| their training manual to court. Just point it out to them! | |
| There are too many potential radar errors to mention here. You must try to | |
| locate them in the vicinity of where you encounter your ticket. Anything that | |
| transmits on uncommon frequencies is great to note. (e.g. burglar alarms, | |
| garage doors, CB's, Ham Radio, rain, fog, police radio, hospitals, etc, etc.) | |
| In closing, I hope you found this information useful and look forward to the | |
| second part in my series, "Beating the Radar Rap: The Technical Side." This | |
| will be a file where I go into picking apart the actual flaws that specific | |
| radar guns have. | |