Questions were raised about the legality of thousands of fines and speeding tickets, after a man dodge a speeding ticket after it was ruled that the speed camera was not calibrated according to law.
The incident happened after Alistair Cachia was fined back in November 2019 after his car was captured by the speed camera located on Triq Tal-Barrani in Zejtun.
Cachia refused to pay the €69 fine before seeing a certificate which confirmed that the camera was calibrated according to law. According to Maltese law, all measuring instruments must be calibrated periodically to ensure they display fair and accurate measurements.
The speed camera which took Cachia’s vehicle photo had been calibrated more than a year earlier, despite a 2011 legal notice specifying that speeding cameras must be calibrated once a year.
LESA’s only evidence of the speeding was thus deemed unlawful and thus forced the tribunal to revoke the contravention. This does not mean that the camera was malfunctioning however.
Times of Malta reported that until the law is amended, speed cameras are being calibrated annually again. Since 2011, speed cameras were responsible for half a million contraventions, which is an average of 50,000 speeding tickets every year.
The first three months of 2022 saw a total of 12,376 speeding tickets issued. The 50km/hr speed limit camera in Nutar Zarb Street in Attard was the one which issued the most tickets every year for a decade.
If drivers exceed the speed limit by less than 15km/hr, they need to €35.65. The price shoots up to €69.65 if they are caught speeding over that limit, wiping off three points off the driver’s license. This means that over the last ten years, the speed cameras generated around €25 million in tickets.
#MaltaDaily