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Tuesday, December 20, 2022

"SPEED ENFORCED BY AIRCRAFT"

CALIFORNIA DRIVER GETS POLICE SUMMONS VIA AIR MAIL

San Jose, California (JFK+50) On December 20, 1922, the Associated Press reports traffic officer Robert Byers, flying in the San Jose area with an aviator friend yesterday, observed a speeding car on the highway below.

The officer, in no position to catch the speeder in a police car, had his pilot "swoop down" so he could drop a quickly completed summons in front of the vehicle.

The AP says the speeder, Mr. Dominic Biflore, "stopped and picked it up."

JFK+50 NOTE

Almost a century later, the Wisconsin State Patrol is engaging in speed enforcement from the air.  Tahleel Mohiedin writes that last year in Edgerton, Wisconsin in a period of 4 hours "troopers (utilizing air surveillance) made 40 traffic stops" on cars moving at at an average speed of 91 mph on a posted 70 mph limit highway.  The highest speed was clocked at 109 mph.

SOURCES

"'An expensive lesson': State Patrol catches speeders as fast as 109 mph in aerial enforcement," by Tahleel Mohiedin, Channel 3000, www.channel3000.com/

"Policeman In Air Detects Speeder, Drops Summons," The Evening Star, Washington, D.C., December 20, 1922, Chronicling America, Library of Congress, www.loc.gov/