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Florida Justices To Weigh In On Red Light Cameras

Florida's highest court will soon be seeing red. Justices agreed to decide whether red-light cameras improperly give "unfettered discretion," to private vendors.
Privacy SOS.com
Florida's highest court will soon be seeing red. Justices agreed to decide whether red-light cameras improperly give "unfettered discretion," to private vendors.

The Florida Supreme Court will weigh in on red light cameras after the Legislature decided not to pull the plug.

Florida's highest court will soon be seeing red. Justices agreed to decide whether red-light cameras improperly give "unfettered discretion," to private vendors.
Credit Privacy SOS.com
Florida's highest court will soon be seeing red. Justices agreed to decide whether red-light cameras improperly give "unfettered discretion," to private vendors.

After getting tagged by a red light camera in Aventura, motorist Luis Torres Jimenez accused the city of giving a private company, “unfettered discretion.”

The Third District Court of Appeal didn’t agree with Jimenez, but other appellate courts do, and the Florida Supreme Court is agreeing to step in.

The Florida House voted 91-22 earlier this year to ban red light cameras but a companion measure died in the Senate. Supporters say the cameras reduce red-light running and save lives. But critics call them a money-making scam.

The Legislature first approved red light cameras in 2010.

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Jim Ash is a reporter at WFSU-FM. A Miami native, he is an award-winning journalist with more than 20 years of experience, most of it in print. He has been a member of the Florida Capital Press Corps since 1992.