Edie Pope, who lives in the village of Lydiate, crafted the scarecrow after growing incensed that drivers were continually ignoring the speed limit.
After a spate of three collisions on Southport Road, local parish councillor Ms Pope decided “something had to be done.”
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Ms Pope had previously and successfully campaigned for the speed limit to be reduced from 60mph to a safer 40mph.
But in spite of this, she noticed motorists passing through the village were still failing to respect the limit
The scarecrow has a high-vis jacket, a cap and wig and even includes a ‘speed camera’ fashioned from an old bleach bottle and a jam jar lid.
Of her new measures, Ms Pope said: “You can really hear the cars slowing down.
"One man tweeted that he really feared he had been caught. I wanted a speed camera but was told they would cost £70,000 to £90,000.
“This has only cost me a fiver at the most.”
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The unusual move could prompt others to follow suit, after a spokesperson for Merseyside Police said Ms Pope’s scarecrow is not unlawful, and is welcomed if it “helps slow motorists down.”
The scarecrow police officer follows a similar story to one that emerged last summer in Wiltshire.
Residents in the village of Hindon placed a couple of scarecrows in high-vis vests next to a speed counter outside the village hall in an attempt stop motorists from breaking the speed limit.
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