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Using GPS To Catch Speeders Found Illegal

jeffy124 writes: "As a followup to a previous Slashdot story, the Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection has ruled against Acme Rent-A-Car in their practice of fining car renters $150 per speeding infraction. The decision was based on the fact that Acme failed to properly word their contracts when they indicated that fines would be imposed for speeding. Dept. Commisioner Jim Fleming also stated that the practice of renters being fined is illegal. However, the practice of tracking vehicles with GPS is still a legal practice."

2 of 341 comments (clear)

  1. The clear problem by spellcheckur · · Score: 5
    The way I see it, regardless of whether or not they "inform" renters, the problem with a rental car company charging (or any other company, for that matter) unilaterally fining consumers are twofold:

    First, a company can't arbitrarily fine a customer. If there is no damage to the automobile, the rental car company has suffered no loss. If they don't incur a loss, they don't have grounds to claim a customer owes them money.

    Secondly, there is no due process. If Acme was allowed to just charge consumers under the claim that they broke the law, it would leave drivers' recourse in civil court. No longer would the burden of criminal proof be on the prosecution; it would be the drivers' responsibility, as plaintiffs to prove that they had been wronged (most speeding violators the cops get abdicate this right anyway by signing off on the ticket and paying the fine instead of excercising their right to due process and contesting the ticket in court, but that's another issue).

    Acme also can't really amend the contract to charge a fee for "fast driving." That would expose them to a slew of lawsuits as a conspirator to speeding or contributor to any accidents that resulted because of it.

    It's obvious this was an attempt to generate revenue. If the actual goal of this stunt was to prevent speeding, the company should have just notified police of speeding infractions while they were happening. As anyone who has ever driven in CT knows, the state itself uses speeding tickets for revenue. There are plenty of troopers, and they're more than willing to write the most expensive tickets in the US to fast drivers.

    ...but nobody wants to shop where the merchant tries to get them in trouble using their product. I hope the publicity from this fiasco causes Acme significant losses

    Oh, yeah IANAL.

  2. Re:Social responsibility? by Gaping+Anus · · Score: 5

    > What happens if you've got the rental car on the German autobahn where there's no speed limit?

    Well, that Connecticut company will probably report the car stolen.