Want To Challenge Your Speed Camera Ticket? That'll Be $100.
Only 536 people live in this Ohio town that issues 1,800 speeding tickets per month.

Motorists caught speeding in Peninsula, Ohio, have options: They can pay with Visa, Mastercard, Discover, or PayPal. But if they want to dispute a ticket, the flexibility ends.
Before vehicle owners can appear in municipal court to defend themselves, they must pay a $100 "filing fee." No exceptions. No discounts. No deferrals. It's the cost of admission—roughly the same as a one-day ticket to Disneyland.
Many drivers skip the expense and plead guilty, which works well for Peninsula. In just the first five months after launching a handheld photo radar program in April 2023, this village south of Cleveland generated 8,900 citations and $560,000 in revenue. That's an average of about 1,800 citations and $110,000 in revenue per month.
These are staggering numbers for a community of just 536 residents. If revenue from the program continues at this rate, Peninsula could meet nearly its entire $1 million annual budget from traffic enforcement alone. Six police officers, rotating among nine strategic locations, could keep the village solvent with virtually no help from tax collectors.
Locking the courthouse doors to all but the most determined defendants—who also have $100 to spare—is key to the scheme. The tactic solves a built-in problem with photo radar enforcement that municipalities have grappled with for decades.
These programs are designed for maximum efficiency, which means eliminating human contact as much as possible. The only hiccup occurs when people demand their day in court. Hearings involve old, labor-intensive technology, which has not changed much in 200 years. A sudden strain on the system—inevitable when a police department starts cranking out more than three citations per resident per month—can produce a backlog.
So Peninsula is hiding its judges behind a paywall. Now officers can point and click without talking to anyone. No traffic stops. No trips to the courthouse. No testimony under oath. Revenue can flow like the nearby Cuyahoga River.
The streamlined approach might not seem novel. Many states impose court costs for minor traffic offenses. Appearance fees range from $22.50 in Maryland to $226 in Illinois.
Other states let people contest their tickets for free but charge for lawful behavior outside the courtroom. Arizona, for example, requires hand delivery of automated traffic tickets, which means vehicle owners can ignore violation letters that come in the mail. Once a process server tracks down these people, they must pay extra for not waiving their right to proper notice.
All of these fees undercut the Constitution, which guarantees due process. But judges typically wait until they hear evidence and render a decision before demanding payment. The timing is important. It means even the poorest citizens—people with no money in the bank—can at least show up and confront their accuser.
Stow Municipal Court, which serves Peninsula, reverses the order and collects fees upfront. People who win their cases get their money back (without interest). But if someone shows up and loses, the court keeps the filing fee and tacks on a fine. A $150 ticket jumps to $250, a 67 percent increase.
Not even California, which forces some motorists to pay deposits to reserve their place on the court docket, goes that far. There, the money collected in advance is based on potential fine amounts and does not raise overall ticket costs. California also requires courts to consider a person's ability to pay for citations upon request. Vehicle owners who demonstrate financial hardship can have fines and fees reduced or waived.
Peninsula ignores financial hardship. Court access is a luxury reserved for people who can pay to play.
The village tries to get around the obvious constitutional affront by classifying most speeding violations as civil rather than criminal offenses. Motorists who lose their cases do not face jail time, have points added to their license, or see their insurance rates go up. Yet they still lose money.
Peninsula downplays the perverse incentive for "taxation by citation," the use of police power to raise revenue, by shifting conversations to public safety. Local officials invoke an allegedly urgent need to slow traffic.
Yet these claims of a crisis are dubious. The Ohio Department of Public Safety reports only one traffic fatality in Peninsula since 2020 and only about three collisions per month.
Since the photo radar program started, this rate has more than doubled to nearly seven per month and the village reached a four-year high of 13 collisions in October 2023. This spike could be a coincidence. Perhaps it reflects lower traffic counts during the COVID-19 pandemic. The sample size is too small for any definitive statement.
What is certain is the disregard for the Constitution. Our public interest law firm, the Institute for Justice, has described its concerns in a November 27 letter to Peninsula officials. Put simply, people have a right to defend themselves before the government imposes fines and fees.
Traffic courts already take shortcuts to raise revenue. Vehicle owners need more access to justice, not paywalls.
CORRECTION: The revenue from the handheld photo radar program in April 2023 was higher than originally reported; the text has been updated to reflect that.
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Just doing a cost/benefit analysis for a friend; what's the fine for blowing away a traffic camera?
More or less than $250?
And can you get to court without fees for that offense?
Years ago, I received a ticket for a non-moving offense in St. Louis, and went to court to contest it. I won, but the $20 fine that I could have paid became $52 in court costs.
Last time I challenged a speeding ticket the judge started off by saying that the law says the radar is right even if you can prove that it was wrong, that he doesn't accept any defense arguments, and stopped short of declaring everyone guilty all at once. He then proceeded to angrily declare everyone guilty one by one. Total asshole.
Sounds worse than what I've had for experiences. But yeah, municipal courts can suck.
1. Get a grip.
2. Didn't happen.
The judge probably got tired of hearing the same stupid arguments over and over again. OPCA speeders...
(Organized Pseudolegal Commercial Argument)
Which is not to excuse his behavior, of course. No one forced him to serve as a judge.
The judge FLAT OUT LIE, and should have been disbarred. The law absolutely DOES NOT say the radar is always right. It also absolutely REQUIRES allowing several possible defenses. What you describe would bankrupt the municipality in a class action lawsuit, if anyone bothered to file one.
Destruction of public property is a felony in OH.
And I assume you also have to pay damages, and you can bet that a government-purchased speed camera is wastefully expensive.
Is that true regardless of the amount of melanin I produce or is this a sort of "It's a felony unless I mostly peacefully destroy public property." situation?
Something that THE Ohio State AG should look into.
In the UK, they set photo cameras on fire.
Just saying.
Not mentioned in this article is what happens if you ignore the automated traffic ticket - don't pay it, don't contest it - just ignore it.
It depends. A couple decades ago, got a photo radar ticket from Scottsdale, AZ. The weakness in the scam was that they had to get service of process on you. They tried registered ail. Didn’t accept any. Sent out a process server. Didn’t answer the door. After 120 days, the ticket went poof. Shortly after that, the Phoenix police chief announced that his people would no longer serve process for photo radar tickets from other jurisdictions, notably Scottsdale. They had better things to do, like fighting crime, than enriching those neighboring jurisdictions.
Texas made enforcing traffic cameras illegal. A couple scummy towns still run their cameras and mail out scary-looking letters to people in the hopes they will pay anyway just out of fear and ignorance. It's the snail mail equivalent of spam email but they do it and apparently it works.
Not to mention this place is in the middle of a national park (Cuyahoga Valley). The vast majority of tickets are likely handed out to people who will never be back in the area anyway, so they sure as shit aren't going to contest it.
Towns have been doing that for a lot longer than cameras have been around. I grew up in a town where you basically couldn't even pick your nose at a red light if you had out of state plates. EVERY little law was enforced to the fullest if they thought you wouldn't come back to contest it.
Crack in your windshield? Ticket.
Air refresher on your mirror? Ticket.
Taillight out? Ticket.
Tinted windows? Ticket.
I was stopped last Thursday. The reason for the stop was that I had my headlights on and was wearing sunglasses. I was stopped by a "Code Enforcement Officer" not a Police Officer. It was a bright day and I was driving into the sun. I informed the "officer" that my lights were on because I was in a construction zone and Pennsylvania has a law that your lights must be on in a construction zone. I was wearing the sunglasses for safety. He got back in his car and left. I was really hoping for the ticket, I have a lawyer friend who lives for things like this.
Texas finally passed a law forbidding local jurisdictions from taking more than one-third of their revenues from traffic tickets. That finally ended the speed-trap villages.
collecting speeding tickets in states where I do not reside is a hobby.
Imagine the joy of the average British speeder in Europe after Brexit: No more information-sharing, so unless they stop the driver at the time of the incident, the local po po have no way of even contacting the driver, much less demanding payment. (Smokey and the Bandit-style roadblocks excepted.)
That and the elimination of the EU banker's bonus cap are the only two actual benefits of Brexit.
In our town the cops stopped ticketing anyone for blowing a red light. The reasoning was that it cost more to send the cop to court then the village could recuperate from the county (Cook county that is).
Ah Cook County, I grew up there, but escaped a few years ago.
That's some fine arithmetic there.
I'll accept the 1800, but not the 110,000.
Good catch. This fact got muddled in the editing. The city generated $560,000 in revenue during the first five months of the program, but only $400,000 in "take-home pay" because $160,000 went to the vendor. So, the average revenue from the program is $112,000 per month, but only $80,000 goes to the city.
I live right next to this white Liberal bucolic shit hole. They also started planting parking meters everywhere. I drive around it and refuse to patronize a single business within it's borders. I'm sure I'm showing them.
My personal favorite was years ago when they moved the Welfare Office to a new building. Overnight the area was polluted with parking meters.
Peninsula should remember the example of Rome, Ohio, or, what was Rome, Ohio.
Edit: New Rome, Ohio.
About 15 years ago Massachusetts started to require payment of a nonrefundable fee to contest a traffic ticket. About five years ago a federal judge ruled that the fee had to be refundable. At one time you could get the fee waived if you were indigent, say a poor student.
I live right near Peninsula. It's centered among some of the best (and only) parks that stayed open during the pandemic. That means traffic was actually higher then and could not be the cause of the recent spike. Given the sample size, the "coincidence" hypothesis is more likely.
Those cameras are illegal in most states. I've received three tickets over the years and just ignored them and the meaningless follow up threats.
What bugs me about these speed fine ripoffs isn't even so much the ripoff itself, but the fact that a $200 ticket ends up costing thousands in increased insurance costs. I mean, it would be more efficient for everybody concerned if they simply held you up at gunpoint.
This will never pass constitutional muster, of course, (equal protection, due process) and it's likely the city leaders who implemented this policy know, but don't care. They assume they won't have to defend this abominable practice in court, since they're so small. And they may be right. There's nothing worse than a small-town tyrant. Even the national leaders who are tyrants know they have to keep up appearances, small town dictators don't care.
Camera's point at the road.
Flank it with a 30.06.
All states need to enact speed trap laws like Texas did. There was a notorious speed trap in LaVon, TX. The only thing supported by the fines was the police department - a self-licking lollipop. Texas passed a last that said if a majority of a jurisdiction’s revenue came from tickets, the vast majority of the fine collected went to the state”s general fund - not the town. Without the speed trap dollars, the town was unwilling to fund its police force through taxes and it was dissolved. The Highway Patrol enforced the speed laws after that.
Several years ago, Ohio changed state law to allow revoking the charter of municipalities because the now former town of New Rome was doing basically the same thing. They actually had nearly as many police officers as adult residents, and the speed limit on the road through town was 10 mph lower than the limit on either side of town. The majority of the town revenue came from speeding tickets. For all practical purposes, New Rome was nothing more than a speed trap.
When government officials act like criminals, they should be treated like criminals. They should be stopped from enforcing illegitimate laws by whatever means prove necessary.