Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Win for cameras

Ruling in Aventura case, panel asks state Supreme Court to weigh in

- By Jim Saunders

Court upholds city’s use of red-light cameras.

Urging the state Supreme Court to take up the controvers­ial issue, an appeals court Wednesday rejected a motorist’s arguments that a South Florida city had given too much authority to a company that operates redlight traffic camera programs.

The 3rd District Court of Appeal overturned a Miami-Dade County judge’s ruling against the city of Aventura in a case involving a motorist who received a ticket for allegedly improperly turning right at a red light.

In challengin­g the ticket, motorist Luis Torres Jimenez contended that the city had illegally given “unfettered discretion” to a redlight camera company to review images of potential violations and to print and send out citations.

Miami-Dade County Judge Steven Leifman dismissed the citation, pointing to a 2014 decision by the 4th District Court of Appeal in a similar case in the Broward County city of Hollywood.

But Leifman also requested that the 3rd District Court of Appeal, which handles Miami-Dade cases, rule on the issues.

In a 29-page ruling Wednesday, the 3rd District Court of Appeal upheld Aventura’s program, which it said relies on police officers — not the private contractor — to make decisions about ticketing motorists.

“Not only do the brightline standards promulgate­d by the city ensure the vendor’s tasks regarding images are purely ministeria­l and non-discretion­ary in nature, but the record reflects that no notice or citation is issued unless and until an individual officer of the city weighs the evidence in the images and determines in his or her profession­al judgment that probable cause exists,” said the ruling, written by appeals court Judge Thomas Logue and joined by Judges Kevin Emas and Linda Ann Wells.

“The officers make these decisions in the same manner they decide to issue a roadside citation.”

But saying the “lawful use of cameras to enforce red lights has attracted the attention of the public, local government­s, and the Legislatur­e,” the judges also called on the Florida Supreme Court to take up the case, a move known as certifying issues to the high court.

The role of companies hired by cities to operate red-light camera programs has been highly controvers­ial in recent years.

While proponents of the cameras say they improve traffic safety, critics argue that the devices are more about generating money for local government­s and the private vendors.

The ruling Wednesday focused on Aventura’s contract with American Traffic Solutions Inc., a major player in the industry.

The contract gave American Traffic Solutions a wide range of responsibi­lities, including installing and maintainin­g cameras, reviewing images and mailing notices and citations to motorists. While Jimenez’s challenge raised issues such as the authority of the company to mail notices and citations, the appeals court focused heavily on American Traffic Solutions’ role in reviewing potential red-light violations.

The ruling said the company sorts through images and puts them into two databases — a “working” database that police review for possible traffic violations and a “non-working” database that police do not use for ticketing motorists.

In sorting through the images, the company considers issues such as whether cameras have misfired and whether license plates are legible. It also reviews photos of cars entering and going through intersecti­ons.

“The question thus becomes whether the vendor’s review in this case involves the exercise of unfettered discretion,” the ruling said. “We hold that it does not. The record reflects that the type of evaluation exercised in the vendor’s decisions is clerical and ministeria­l.

“When sorting images into the working and nonworking databases, the vendor separates the images that are usable because they contain certain easy-to-ascertain informatio­n, from those that are not usable because they fail to contain that informatio­n.

“For example, the vendor exercises no unfettered discretion when it determines the camera misfired, the traffic light in the image displays green, or the vehicle license plate number in the image is illegible.”

The ruling also tried to draw distinctio­ns with the Hollywood red-light camera program rejected in the 2014 ruling by the 4th District Court of Appeal. It said the Hollywood program did not give police officers as much authority in deciding whether motorists were cited.

“In contrast, in the [Aventura] case, the vendor has no authority to decide that a citation will issue,” the ruling Wednesday said. “Only the police officer, whose name and badge number appears on the citation, decides if probable cause exists, and if a notice and citation issues.”

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