Police in New Jersey are writing more tickets for safety violations in the nearly four years since the state ended motor vehicle safety inspections.
A review of court records by The Record newspaper finds police issued nearly 100,000 tickets for poorly maintained lights last year.
Tickets for chipped or broken windshields rose nearly 39 percent. There was a 10 percent increase of vehicles ticketed for worn tires.
Citations for faulty brakes, driving with no brakes and faulty mufflers dropped between 2009 and 2014.
The Motor Vehicle Commission has three mobile vans to make roadside inspections. About 69 percent of the vehicles that were spot-checked passed last year.
Topics Auto New Jersey
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