TheNewspaper.com: A Journal of Driving and Politics
Home >Police Enforcement > Seizure/Confiscation > Peoria, Illinois Enacts Car Confiscation Ordinance 



Related News
Wisconsin Appeals Court Limits Scope of Move Over Law

Florida: Highway Trooper Busted For Writing Fake Tickets

Virginia Boosts Speed Limit to 70

Wisconsin Appeals Court: Cop Stop Justified by Mystery Object

Minnesota Supreme Court Rules DUI Possible in Inoperable Vehicle



View Main Topics:


Get Email Updates
Subscribe via RSS or E-Mail


Back To Front Page
Print It Email It

4/26/2006
Peoria, Illinois Enacts Car Confiscation Ordinance
Peoria, Illinois passes ordinance to confiscate cars with loud stereos without due process.

Peoria city councilThe city of Peoria, Illinois hopes to raise funds with an ordinance allowing it to seize vehicles with loud stereos beginning June 1. With a 6-5 vote yesterday, the city council directed police to confiscate any car from which "sound can be heard from seventy-five feet or more." The city will collect $105 in fees for the first offense and $355 on subsequent offenses without first offering the accused a defense in a proper court of law.

Vehicles will be towed away on the spot upon the word of a police officer. If the car owner makes a request within 24 hours, Peoria will appoint a city employee to judge the case in a proceeding, "where the formal rules of evidence will not apply... and hearsay evidence shall be admissible," according to the ordinance. This hearing must take place within three days. If someone other than the owner was driving, the city can keep the car for 45 days before holding any hearing.

If the hearing officer finds it "probable" that the car made noise, the city will keep it until impounding fees, which add up on a daily basis, are paid. The city hopes to sell all vehicles that are not claimed within 30 days after a hearing.

A full copy of the ordinance is available in a 229k PDF file at the source link below.

Source: Ordinance Relating to the Noise and Impoundment of Vehicles (Peoria City Council, 4/26/2006)

Permanent Link for this item
Return to Front Page



Front Page | Get Updates | Site Map | News Achive | Search | RSS Feed
theNewspaper.com: A journal of the politics of driving
thenewspaper.com