"Nibby" (nibby68)
04/13/2015 at 10:55 • Filed to: None | 9 | 7 |
EL_ULY
> Nibby
04/13/2015 at 10:59 | 2 |
would boots work round these parts?
ttyymmnn
> Nibby
04/13/2015 at 11:05 | 1 |
My brother found this lying by the side of the street in Oakland a while ago. I would think, though, that they make a record of the boot number and the license plate.
ACESandEIGHTS
> Nibby
04/13/2015 at 11:14 | 0 |
I note from the Euro license plate that this man isn't from Denver. Where this would never have happened.
jariten1781
> ttyymmnn
04/13/2015 at 11:15 | 1 |
They do. If it's a city boot you're gonna get boned for a 200-400 dollar boot removal fee regardless, plus the loss of your wheel unless you reclaim it. If it goes missing or is damaged they charge like 2500 bucks. If it was a private boot in a parking lot you're probably good to go unless it was damaged. That assumes the car was legally registered, which isn't a good assumption since a lot of the cars that get booted do so due to registration problems, at least around these parts.
Nibby
> ttyymmnn
04/13/2015 at 11:19 | 0 |
o_O
buford-t-justice
> Nibby
04/13/2015 at 11:25 | 2 |
450X_FTW
> Nibby
04/13/2015 at 11:27 | 0 |
When I was working at the Chrysler Tech Center, the security would boot cars, M plated test vehicles, if they were parked where they shouldn't be. Problem is you could still get the wheel off with the boot on. So one month a coworker went on vacation for several weeks, in that time several of us had our Grand Cherokee test vehicles booted. We decided to swap the booted wheel with the wheels from his legally parked GC test vehicle until all 4 of his wheels were booted. He was just a little bit pissed off when he returned.