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sMASH wrote:Sooo there should be no need to produce ANY documents on the scene, or even have them on ur person.
They can merely type in ur plates, or ur DP, and pull up everyting.
That law should be stricken off the books.
Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:TTPS can check your vehicle inspection, registration and your drivers permit from this hand held device
The police can stop a vehicle for any reason. If they ask you to stop, you should always pull over when it’s safe to do so. You’re breaking the law if you do not stop.
If you’re stopped, the police can ask to see your:
driving licence
insurance certificate
MOT certificate
If you do not have these documents with you, you have 7 days to take them to a police station. You’re breaking the law if you do not show the requested documents within 7 days.
The police can also give you an on-the-spot fixed penalty notice for many minor offences and make you take a breath test in certain circumstances.
You can also have your vehicle seized if you’re stopped on suspicion of driving without insurance and for some other offences.
https://www.gov.uk/stopped-by-police-wh ... our-rights
Not hard to add... We already have to produce a plethora of documents fur the most banal of transactions. One more won't hurt.Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:sMASH wrote:Sooo there should be no need to produce ANY documents on the scene, or even have them on ur person.
They can merely type in ur plates, or ur DP, and pull up everyting.
That law should be stricken off the books.
That system does not have proof of insurance
Ba dum tsspugboy wrote:meanwhile offduty officers can drive heaviiy tinted vehicles with internal blue flashers
and bandits too...
sMASH wrote:Not hard to add... We already have to produce a plethora of documents fur the most banal of transactions. One more won't hurt.Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:sMASH wrote:Sooo there should be no need to produce ANY documents on the scene, or even have them on ur person.
They can merely type in ur plates, or ur DP, and pull up everyting.
That law should be stricken off the books.
That system does not have proof of insurance
In fact, I motion that lo require u submit proof of valid insurance to be on file, just like u go fir inspection to update the system, u update ur insurance same time.
The joke is that they figure nobody knows that they are police.sMASH wrote:Ba dum tsspugboy wrote:meanwhile offduty officers can drive heaviiy tinted vehicles with internal blue flashers
and bandits too...
The Ontario Provincial Police will easily be able to catch drivers for even minor infractions with the major expansion of licence plate scanning technology in the province.
Schmidt said the Automated Licence Plate Recognition (ALPR) technology instantly notifies police of things like expired registration, arrest warrants, or if a vehicle is stolen. It also has the capability of capturing vehicles of interest during amber alerts.
Up to three cameras are mounted on top of police cruisers. One or two cameras point forward, and one points backwards, so that an officer can scan cars in multiple directions.
Schmidt said the technology will be a "game changer" for police, who can now scan hundreds of licence plates within minutes while monitoring the roadways.
For example, within 22 minutes of patrolling Highway 403 in Mississauga on Monday, Schmidt said the system was able to flag 32 vehicles for infractions.
He said the system identified one suspended driver, four unlicenced drivers, and 27 expired vehicle registrations.
The number vehicles being flagged were coming in so fast it was impossible to keep up with pulling them over, Schmidt said.
https://toronto.ctvnews.ca/what-ontario-drivers-need-to-know-about-major-rollout-of-licence-plate-scanning-technology-1.6273310
maj. tom wrote:An example of an ALPR system with scanning license plates just implemented in ON., Canada, and what the police can do. There is no reason they cannot do a similar system here right?
The Ontario Provincial Police will easily be able to catch drivers for even minor infractions with the major expansion of licence plate scanning technology in the province.
Schmidt said the Automated Licence Plate Recognition (ALPR) technology instantly notifies police of things like expired registration, arrest warrants, or if a vehicle is stolen. It also has the capability of capturing vehicles of interest during amber alerts.
Up to three cameras are mounted on top of police cruisers. One or two cameras point forward, and one points backwards, so that an officer can scan cars in multiple directions.
Schmidt said the technology will be a "game changer" for police, who can now scan hundreds of licence plates within minutes while monitoring the roadways.
For example, within 22 minutes of patrolling Highway 403 in Mississauga on Monday, Schmidt said the system was able to flag 32 vehicles for infractions.
He said the system identified one suspended driver, four unlicenced drivers, and 27 expired vehicle registrations.
The number vehicles being flagged were coming in so fast it was impossible to keep up with pulling them over, Schmidt said.
https://toronto.ctvnews.ca/what-ontario-drivers-need-to-know-about-major-rollout-of-licence-plate-scanning-technology-1.6273310
VexXx Dogg wrote:maj. tom wrote:An example of an ALPR system with scanning license plates just implemented in ON., Canada, and what the police can do. There is no reason they cannot do a similar system here right?
The Ontario Provincial Police will easily be able to catch drivers for even minor infractions with the major expansion of licence plate scanning technology in the province.
Schmidt said the Automated Licence Plate Recognition (ALPR) technology instantly notifies police of things like expired registration, arrest warrants, or if a vehicle is stolen. It also has the capability of capturing vehicles of interest during amber alerts.
Up to three cameras are mounted on top of police cruisers. One or two cameras point forward, and one points backwards, so that an officer can scan cars in multiple directions.
Schmidt said the technology will be a "game changer" for police, who can now scan hundreds of licence plates within minutes while monitoring the roadways.
For example, within 22 minutes of patrolling Highway 403 in Mississauga on Monday, Schmidt said the system was able to flag 32 vehicles for infractions.
He said the system identified one suspended driver, four unlicenced drivers, and 27 expired vehicle registrations.
The number vehicles being flagged were coming in so fast it was impossible to keep up with pulling them over, Schmidt said.
https://toronto.ctvnews.ca/what-ontario-drivers-need-to-know-about-major-rollout-of-licence-plate-scanning-technology-1.6273310
https://www.eff.org/pages/automated-lic ... aders-alpr
I'm with them on this.
Only thing you need to transfer is the transfer form , two forms of ID from both parties, a utility bill as proof of address and insurance on the buyer's name...certified copy is not neededWM_Tuner wrote:To transfer a car you need a certified copy less than ONE year old. From licensing office. The same place that does the transfers and has the database. So you have to prove to them that you own the car by giving them a certified copy issued by ...them so that they can transfer it. Smh.
Well that's the correct information I listed but everybody else shoot a call and get things done without actually going into LO.pugboy wrote:I thought they does send you in the back and have officer sign off on the transfer after verifying car is the said car
Was that the post where you stated that a certified copy must be carried in the vehicle at all times? Was that statement true or not?hover11 wrote:Well that's the correct information I listed but everybody else shoot a call and get things done without actually going into LO.pugboy wrote:I thought they does send you in the back and have officer sign off on the transfer after verifying car is the said car
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