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New Zealand police force's new unmarked car made useless by epic fail

motor1 logo motor1 15/02/2021 15:40:00 Christopher Smith

a close up of a toy car: Holden Equinox Unmarked New Zealand Police Vehicle © Motor1.com UKHolden Equinox Unmarked New Zealand Police Vehicle

A little Photoshop skill goes a long way.

Digitally altering photos in Photoshop is pretty easy on a basic level. That also means folks with more knowledge can easily unalter such photos. The Waikato Police department in New Zealand learned this lesson the hard way after boasting about a new unmarked car on Facebook. A quick digital blackout hid the identity of the vehicle, but a simple image flip revealed it as Holden's version of the Chevrolet Equinox. How embarrassing.

To the credit of Waikato Police, they seem to be good sports about the public outing of their not-so-secret patrol vehicle. The original Facebook post showing the masked car has been removed, but they followed up with a conciliatory post stating their message of "anywhere, anytime" remains the same.

a close up of a car: Holden Equinox Unmarked New Zealand Police Vehicle © Motor1.com UKHolden Equinox Unmarked New Zealand Police Vehicle

The rookie mistake here was shading out the car but not going full opaque. That would convert the entire image to pure black, leaving nothing of the original to resurrect. Instead, the original image is recovered rather easily simply by pumping up the light levels. We sometimes see automakers make the same mistake with silhouetted teaser images of new vehicles, often revealing more details than intended once the levels are increased.

Related Facebook post

Shared from Facebook

But wait, there's more.

Scouring the comments on Waikato's Facebook post, we see a link to an official press release from New Zealand Police originally distributed last July that straight-up talks about the Equinox undercover vehicles. The undoctored image below actually comes from that release, with the text explaining the role of unmarked vehicles in catching bad drivers red-handed.

a car parked in a parking lot: Holden Equinox Unmarked New Zealand Police Vehicle © Motor1.com UKHolden Equinox Unmarked New Zealand Police Vehicle

"Unmarked vehicles are particularly effective in detecting high-risk behaviours such as driving while not wearing seatbelts, driving while impaired, driving distracted, and travelling at unsafe speeds," said Inspector Peter McKennie, acting national manager for road policing. "We know that speed has the biggest impact on the outcome of a crash - whether you walk away, or are carried away. That is why we unapologetically continue to focus on stopping people speeding on the roads."

These police cars don't hide in plain sight:

Debate about the use of unmarked patrol vehicles for traffic enforcement has raged for decades. Proponents say the cars deter bad driving, while opponents claim using such vehicles isn't about safety or deterrence at all, but merely revenue generators designed to catch people in the act.

In any case, Waikato's secret fleet isn't so secret anymore. In fact, it was never really a secret in the first place.

Source: Newshub.co.nz, New Zealand Police, Waikato Police Facebook

lundi 15 février 2021 17:40:00 Categories: motor1

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