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Cameras on I-95 erase evidence, let shooters go free

Cameras on I-95 erase evidence, let shooters go free Sun Sentinel 2 hrs ago Brittany Wallman, South Florida Sun-Sentinel © Michael Laughlin/Sun Sentinel Sheilla Nunez displays a photograph of her 22-year-old daughter, Melissa Gonzalez, who was killed by what police say was a stray bullet on I-95 one year ago. “It’s incredible how an amazing young lady can just lose her life there and no one does anything,” Nunez said Some of the worst crimes on Interstate 95 were captured on camera. But the images just as quickly vanished. Cameras all along the deadly corridor monitor traffic flow, but the Florida Department of Transportation won’t set them to record. Victims of violence and highway patrol troopers say video recordings would help them find who pulled the trigger in highway shootings. But FDOT representatives told the South Florida Sun Sentinel that the agency doesn’t want the chore and expense of storing vast amounts of video footage.

Local Expressway Shootings At Crisis Level With 59 So Far This Year; Man Suffered Life-Threatening Injuries In I-57 Shooting On Thursday

Local Expressway Shootings At Crisis Level With 59 So Far This Year; Man Suffered Life-Threatening Injuries In I-57 Shooting On Thursday CBS Chicago 2 hrs ago Syndicated Local – CBS Chicago CHICAGO (CBS) There has been yet another shooting on Interstate 57. The latest shooting happened at 11:06 a.m. on northbound I-57 at Halsted Street, according to Illinois State Police. Troopers said they found a victim inside his car with life-threatening injuries, but did not immediately provide further details. The driver’s side door of the car was left riddled with bullet holes. All northbound lanes on I-57 were closed for hours, but they have since reopened. Meanwhile, if it feels like we’re seeing and hearing about more and more expressway shootings in the Chicago area lately, then your hunch is right.

ISP Gets $12 million for New Cameras to Combat Spike in Expressway Shootings

Last year, Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed the Tamara Clayton Expressway Camera Act, which required the state to install new cameras on expressways. Current expressway cameras are low-definition and don’t record video. The act was named for a postal worker who was shot and killed on her way to work on Interstate 57 in 2019. “No one should feel afraid for their life or safety on Illinois expressways,” Pritzker said in a statement. “Tamara Clayton’s tragic death must not be forgotten, and we must do everything we can to prevent more expressway shootings.” A sponsor of the bill, state Rep. Thaddeus Jones, D-Calumet City, said the cameras will not necessarily stop the shootings on expressway but “will be used as a tool to catch those people who are using our expressways as their own personal shooting range.”

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