In Ford's home city, police hunt aggressive drivers with disguised and silent Mustang Mach-E. There is even flagrant:
Police in Dearborn, Michigan (USA), started using undercover vehicles based on the Ford Mustang Mach-E to catch reckless driving in the city. With discreet paint and electric motorization, the cars allow agents to observe traffic without attracting attention. The choice for silent models was deliberate: the goal is to catch those who only respect the rules when they see a traditional vehicle.
The vehicles are part of the Aggressive Driving Unit, a division dedicated to combating dangerous driving and announced last month. According to police chief Issa Shahin, complaints about road safety have become a recurring complaint among residents. He claims to have heard, throughout the city, concerns about dangerous behavior behind the wheel and says that the unit was created to reinforce inspection and make the streets safer. Unmarked cars, he adds, help agents to act more discreetly.
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The first results have already appeared. In a video released by the corporation, a driver of a Ford F-250 is caught treating a busy road as if it were a race track. The images show the driver changing lanes abruptly, closing other cars, overtaking on the right and, sometimes, without signaling. “To every driver who has ever been closed on Ford Road, this is for you,” police wrote in the caption, referring to the avenue that bears the automaker’s name, whose global headquarters are precisely in Dearborn.
Shortly after, the driver is stopped and talks to the police. The department did not detail which infractions were recorded. In Michigan, however, a conviction for reckless driving can earn first-time offenders six points on their license, a fine of up to about $500, up to 93 days in jail, or a combination of a fine and jail time.
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