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Posts Tagged ‘radar’

01/15/2005 - Former Technician Strengthens Cop’s Case

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

This article was posted on nj.com on January 15, 2005. This is a follow-up to the Josh Losito DUI and speeding case involving GHS radar.

To keep things short, the issue at hand was that GHS radar units were banned from use during from September 3, 2003 to December 14, 2003 in 2003 and newer models of Ford Crown Victoria’s and Josh Losito was clocked with a GHS radar gun on December 4, 2003 while the guns were banned from use.

The trooper that stopped Josh was driving a 2001 model Ford Crown Victoria, so the ban did not apply to him. A slight technicality, but it cost a win.

Frankly I think if there was a ban, it should have been a wide-spread ban regardless of the year of the vehicle because, as John Timothy Shingara stated, the problems occurred in Crown Victoria models of varying years.

Download the article here.

12/28/2004 - News Urges Judge to Lift Gag Rule In Radar Case

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

This article was published by the Philadelphia Daily News on December 28, 2004. It’s a brief article that states attorneys representing the Daily News filed a motion to have the gag ordered, which was imposed by Judge Sylvia Rambo, lifted in the GHS radar gun scandal case.

Again, this gag order should have never been imposed to begin with. If anything it should be seen as retaliation to the Philadelphia Daily News, all the lawyers and other various news sources reporting on the problem.

Why the gag order if the Pennsylvania State Police have nothing to hide? They obviously had something to hide and internal memos show that.

Download the article here.

12/16/2004 - State Cops Get Gag Order In Faulty Radar Gun Case

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

This article was published in the Philadelphia Daily News on December 16, 2004. It discusses how Judge Sylvia Rambo issued a wide-ranging gag order that prohibits lawyers from releasing documents that surface during the discovery process in the ever-growing radar gun scandal.

Now if the GHS radar guns are so accurate, why would the Pennsylvania State Police request to have a gag order in the case to prevent newspaper reporters and lawyers from releasing documents to the public?

Simple answer: They don’t want the public to know the truth about the problems with their GHS radar guns. The Philadelphia Daily News was simply doing their job by reporting their findings and research to the public. Obviously the state police do not want the public to know about the problems when they are making $26 million a year on speeding tickets alone and all of the tickets that earned the money could be contested due to faulty equipment.

This gag order should have never been issued. The gag order was eventually lifted and Judge Sylvia Rambo recused herself from the case. I wonder why?

Download the article here.

12/15/2004 - Col. Jeffrey B. Miller’s Response

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

This response was posted on the Pennsylvania State Police Web site on December 12, 2004. It is Col. Jeffrey B. Miller’s response to an editorial that was published in the Patriot-News. Unfortunately I never obtained that article.

In short, this response is the same thing the State Police has been saying all along…the GHS radar guns are accurate. This response details the actions that the State Police took to correct the problem (Read: what they did in attempts to cover-up the problem because the public found out).

Download the article here.

12/14/2004 - House Leader Concerned By Radar Guns

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

This article was published in the Philadelphia Daily News on December 14, 2004. It discusses House Majority Leader Sam Smith and his concerns about Genesis Handheld Stationary (GHS) radar.

It further states how the University of Pittsburgh findings contradict with the findings of three previous studies and how Marlin Mickle states the study was never done to show the guns accuracy, even though the Pennsylvania State Police continue to state that it does show the guns are accurate.

Download the article here.

12/11/2004 - Drunken Driving Defendant Challenges Radar Gun Accuracy

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

This article was published in the Philadelphia Daily News on December 11, 2004. It describes how a man charged with speeding and drunk driving attempted to have part of his case thrown out due to the use of Genesis Handheld Stationary (GHS) radar.

Now I don’t condone drunk driving, but he did have a case if he was initially only pulled over for speeding. He hired a lawyer, Jason Jenkins, and subpoenaed John Timothy Shingara to testify. A ruling was not made at the time of the article.


Download the article here.

12/10/2004 - State Cops Pulled A Fast One On Pitt

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

This article was published in the Pittsburgh Tribune Review on December 10, 2004. It discusses how the Pennsylvania State Police continue to use the University of Pittsburgh Study as proof positive that the Genesis Handheld Stationary (GHS) radar guns are accurate, when the report shows otherwise.

Not only does the report show how easy it is to obtain false readings from objects such as cell phones and watches, but Marlin Mickle, the professor conducting the study, stated the following:

“The goal of our study was not to ascertain the accuracy of the radar gun.”

Why are state police using the University of Pittsburgh study exactly for that then? I’ll tell you the answer…they were grasping at straws and this was their last one. They were so brazen, they didn’t even notify Marlin Mickle about their reasoning and purpose of the study or past reported problems. Marlin Mickle had no idea Radargate was even going on and that he was being used as a pawn in the grand scheme of things.


Download the article here.

12/09/2004 - Another Black Eye For State Police

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

This article was published by the Philadelphia Daily News on December 9, 2004. It is a rather humorous and witty article written by John Baer. Yet again, this reiterates the problems with Genesis Handheld Stationary (GHS) radar and states that the University of Pittsburgh report shows how the guns obtain false readings. Also pokes fun at the study for not testing in a real world environment and making statements/claims without actually testing them.


Download the article here.

12/09/2004 - PSP Letter to the Editor

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

This is a letter to the editor written by Pennsylvania State Police Press Secretary, Jack Lewis on December 9, 2004. Poor Jack must have been heart-broken because this was never published. He attempts to discredit Nicole Weisensee-Egan and states that the whole thing is one big incredible conspiracy theory.

Jack Lewis states the following:

In order to accept this incredible conspiracy theory, one must believe all of the following:

  • That the manufacturer, Guth Laboratories and the University of Pittsburgh would risk their professional reputations and the future of their agencies by knowingly lying about the results of their tests.
  • That Pennsylvania State Troopers would knowingly issue fraudulent speeding citations that would not stand up in court, thus risking their reputations and careers.
  • That thousands of police nationwide who use Decatur Genesis handheld radar units are part of a national conspiracy to defraud the public.

Now here’s my take on that.

1) I don’t believe the manufacturer, Guth Labs, or the University of Pittsburgh lied about the results of their tests. Look at the University of Pittsburgh report and you will see it shows there are numerous problems with GHS radar. How can the Pennsylvania State Police use the University of Pittsburgh study to show GHS radar is accurate when the professor conducting the study, Marlin Mickle, stated himself that the tests did not prove the GHS radar guns were accurate? If anything the test shows how inaccurate the guns are with numerous ways to obtain false readings. I believe Guth Labs and the manufacturer, Decatur Electronics, would be risking even more by not lying. What company would want to admit that there is a major problem with a product that generates billions of dollars in revenue for police departments nationwide? If Decatur admitted the problems, nobody would want to purchase or use their products because they don’t work correctly. Instead of admitting the problem, let police departments use the products blindly, knowing that they aren’t accurate, but knowing that they will still generate billions in revenue and John Q. Public won’t be able to contest it anyway. Guth Labs certifies the units regularly and the units are on Pennsylvania’s approved radar listing. Fighting the accuracy of radar is damn near impossible as long as all of the state requirements are met.

2) I don’t know about others, but where I’m from and the courts there, the judges and magistrates will always side with the police. You are basically guilty unless you can prove you are innocent, and even if you can prove you are innocent, the judge/magistrate may still side with the police. That’s how corrupt the court system is. Unless you hire a lawyer, you are pretty much screwed. State troopers know this, magistrates and judges know this, and they all work together to fill their coffers and quotas. I’ve had a state trooper lie in court two separate times and had evidence to show he was lying and it was still his word against mine and his held up. That’s just the way it is, and I don’t think State Police or any police for that matter really care about risking their reputation by giving some guy/girl a ticket that they know they won’t be able to fight anyway.

3) When you are using a faulty device that is on an approved radar list, you are defrauding the public. This isn’t a national conspiracy. This is how police departments make money. I mean when you are making over $26 million a year on speeding tickets alone, I really don’t think police departments care if they are defrauding the public. It’s such a large income stream that as long as the radar is on the approved list, it doesn’t matter if faults come up later on just as long as the public doesn’t know about them.

There truly needs to be an organization, agency or something that will step up - Re-evaluate the guns and all previous studies and have it removed from the approved radar listing in Pennsylvania. To look at the facts of the studies that were conducted, it is ludicrous that these radar units can still be used. The Genesis Handheld Stationary model was replaced with a newer Genesis Handheld Directional model several years ago, however, departments are still allowed to use GHS.


Download the letter here.

12/08/2004 - Cops Had Response Awaiting Our “Call”

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

This article was published by the Philadelphia Daily News on December 8, 2004. This brief article describes how the Pennsylvania State Police suspected that the Philadelphia Daily News knew about the GHS radar problems in early December 2003, before the Daily News even began asking questions. Internal State Police memos show that they Pennsylvania State Police attempted to “craft” possible responses to various radar questions should Nicole Egan, Philadelphia Daily News reporter who covered most of the GHS radar problems, call and ask.

An internal memo stated:
On Jan. 7, 2004, when the Daily News first posed questions to the state police spokesman about the radar problems, the Spokesman e-mailed the questions to superiors with this comment: “We have been waiting for these questions and I think we already have positioned ourselves correctly on this issue. “I would like to have a meeting involving the appropriate representatives from Patrol, Tech Services and Legal to obtain input so that the Public Information Office can craft a response to Egan. The Governor’s Press Office already has indicated that it wants to see our response before it is sent.”


Download the article here.