Most drivers in Illinois (and in many other states) know that it is illegal to have heavily-tinted, darkened glass in the windows of the driver's door and of the front-seat passenger's door. The reasons are obvious - for the safety of a police officer who approaches the vehicle during a traffic stop. (Frankly, I've always wondered why the rear window and the glass in rear doors can be tinted. A carload of hoodlums could easily have shooters in the back seat, and a cop would never see them.)
What is amazing is the number of vehicles on the road with darkened front, side windows! Have you noticed how many?
Check out this Infiniti 4-door sedan observed in Woodstock tonight. Not only were the front windows tinted, but there was no front license plate. The rear plate was there, though; it was Illinois 545 0006.
To illustrate the power of the auto dealers' lobby in Illinois, it is not illegal to sell a car with illegally-darkened front windows. It's just illegal to drive one. This exemption should be removed from the Illinois Vehicle Code, allowing enforcement to start right where it belongs - before the car ever hits the streets.
The Illinois State Police will ticket drivers with darkened windows and no front license plate. Visibility of the driver and front-plate identification are important for PhotoRadar enforcement in highway work zones and for tollbooth enforcement on the Tollway.
Why don't local police support the State Police with rigid enforcement efforts? My personal experience is that speeders and tailgaters often fail (refuse) to display front license plates, have darkened front windows and use tinted license plate covers to obscure license plate numbers.
Write the tickets and publicize the efforts. Use the "safety" enforcement units to tickets these drivers, too; not just those who don't wear seatbelts.
The last time most drivers looked at the Illinois Rules of the Road was when they were 16 and on the way to get their driver's license for the first time. Maybe drivers should have to take a written test every five years as a review of the rules of the road.
8 comments:
Absolutely. Why should law enforcement worry about "real" crime when there is revenue to be generated from nuisance laws.
Any word on the vehicle code that grants law enforcement the ability to make traffic stops anywhere they are?
pirate, since you are so interested in this, why don't you call the Lakemoor P.D. and ask the chief under what authority his officer made a traffic stop in the City of McHenry?
im not interested in it, i want you to find the code since you are so sure it exists. i could care less about it.
pirate, some days you get what you want; some days you don't. Today you don't.
so you just cant find it frank, can you? you're starting to get an attitude are you? gus isn't really your real name. its frank. being called frank makes you mad just like i call you a butt pirate? maybe ill change it to frank the butt pirate.
there, i changed it just for you.
I hope I'm in line when your knowledge of the rules of the road and the vehicle code get you flunked out of your license. Then we'll get to hear about how wrong the Sec. of States personnel are but probably not about the people in line who take too long and hold up others.
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