Skip to main content

Police admit to hiding speed cameras in tractors

Humberside Police has admitted to hiding cameras in farm vehicles in a bid to catch speeding bikers on a high casualty rural road in East Yorkshire, despite advice from the Government that ‘vehicles from which mobile speed cameras can be deployed should be liveried and clearly identifiable as an enforcement vehicle’. Humberside Police admitted go the Daily Mail it had employed the new tactics as part of an ongoing aim to reduce the number of motorcyclists killed or seriously injured on the B1253 in East
October 1, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Humberside Police has admitted to hiding cameras in farm vehicles in a bid to catch speeding bikers on a high casualty rural road in East Yorkshire, despite advice from the Government that ‘vehicles from which mobile speed cameras can be deployed should be liveried and clearly identifiable as an enforcement vehicle’.

Humberside Police admitted go the Daily Mail it had employed the new tactics as part of an ongoing aim to reduce the number of motorcyclists killed or seriously injured on the B1253 in East Yorkshire. There have been 76 collisions on the road in the past decade, 19 of which were serious and three fatal.

The Department for Transport has said that vehicles from which mobile speed cameras are deployed should be liveried and clearly identifiable as an enforcement vehicle.

Inspector Mark Hughes from Humberside Police Road Policing told the paper: “At the moment Humberside Police are conducting Operation Kansas in the East Riding of Yorkshire.

He said the operation was running alongside the force’s Operation Achilles, which is concerned with ‘high end’ speeding offenders in East Riding, deploying speed cameras, which are located in a variety of stationary vehicles.

He went on: “Vehicles which are detected travelling at very high speeds are stopped further along the road and drivers/riders are spoken to and dealt with at the roadside. Although the majority of offenders are motorcycles, a number of cars are also dealt with on this operation. We regularly record speeds in the high 90s and over 100 mph, these being on country roads where the national speed limit of 60 mph is in force.”

Speaking to the BBC RAC's Simon Williams said that speeding is a factor in many accidents but hiding speed cameras is not the answer.  He said, “Speed cameras, painted yellow, are used at accident black spots as a highly effective way of getting motorists to slow down."

Related Content

  • Maryland deployment for Vitronic Lidar
    September 2, 2022
    Conduent contract will see 90 Poliscan FM1 speed monitoring systems installed this month
  • EU transport committee votes for cross-border enforcement of traffic offences
    May 18, 2012
    Motorists who speed, ignore red lights or drink and drive when in a European country other than their own will be brought to book more easily, thanks to closer cooperation between European police forces and EU-wide enforcement of traffic rules, under plans approved yesterday by the European Parliament's transport committee. However, the UK and Ireland decided not to opt in to the system, while Denmark is entitled to opt out because the Council changed the legal basis of the directive from "transport" to "po
  • IAM RoadSmart welcomes US study on benefits of humans and new vehicles working together
    August 17, 2017
    UK independent road safety charity IAM RoadSmart has welcomed a new white paper which it says supports its statement that we will not gain the full safety benefits of self-driving cars until every car on the road is connected to each other. Until then, IAM RoadSmart believes that the human mind holds the edge, until such point that connected cars actually ‘talk’ to each other and predict what is happening over the horizon. According to the white paper, Sensor Fusion: A Comparison of Sensing Capabilities of
  • Speeding the recovery of stranded commercial vehicles is paying dividends in Georgia
    April 9, 2014
    Delcan’s Cheryl-Marie Hansberger details how Georgia’s Towing and Recovery Incentive Program (TRIP) has improved road safety and helped to reduce traffic congestion in the metro Atlanta region. By 2008, steady increases in population had led the Texas Transportation Institute to declare Atlanta, Georgia to be the third most congested city in the US. In an effort to increase road user safety and mitigate the effects of traffic, the Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) and its local partners have imple