MirrorOnline.The shocking stats revealed that drivers were caught 2.2 million times in 2019, which is up a significant amount from 1.9 million times back in 2017.Many have raised the allegation that the driving fines issued by these cameras are aimed at making money and not actually to make the roads safer, and police and fire chiefs backed up this claim earlier this year.Drivers claim many cameras are aimed primarily at making money rather than cutting accidents – a suspicion backed by police and fire chiefs earlier this year.A report by Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary called for greater transparency over the use of cameras.It said: “We were told that the reason enforcement took place at certain locations was that they were.
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