A
Longmont man has been ticketed $50 for suspicion of interfering with a traffic
signal, but he says he really enjoyed using it. Jason Niccum told The
Longmont Times-Call that he bought a device that let him change traffic lights
from red to green, called an
Opticon, on eBay for $100. He told the newspaper the device "paid for
itself" in the two years he had it, helping him cut his time driving to work.
Niccum was cited on March 29 after police said they caught him using the
strobe-like device to change traffic signals. Police confiscated the Opticon,
and informed Niccum it was illegal to possess it. An Opticon shines a strobe
light on the optical sensors set atop some traffic signals, causing lights to
jam.
The Opticon devices, which are becoming more commonplace, are marketed through
many different avenues. Dealers are instructed to sell only to "authorized
users" such as volunteer first responders, doctors and security personnel, but
it is easy for anyone to buy the devices online.