Tow victim strikes back. Tow Truck Driver Can Continue Path to Hell on Foot.

December 10, 2008  |  Good  |  , , , , ,

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OlLC1Iy1UkE&eurl]Like any American, I own a car. I only needed one incident to build the undying hate I have for the industry. They scour the alleys and streets, looking for any opportunity to strike helpless victims. I understand they are the dung beetles of transportation, moving crap from one location to another. Here are my issues:

-They try and lock up vehicles before the owner can even speak to them, eliminating any chance of discussing the issue rationally.
-They are often old men who act like jackasses. Being very short and terse with their skimpy explanation.
-They try to cut deals with you, offering to let your car go if you pay them cash in hand.
-They flock to car wreck scenes like vultures to a fresh kill, fighting for the days goods.
-No matter what the circumstance, once they’ve hooked up your car, you will be asking your friends for a ride (usually 20 miles from where you got towed, somewhere outside the city) to the outskirts of town to pay for your car, traveling expenses incurred by transporting, and time spent at the lot.

I once was towed while the car was running and a friend was sitting in the car with the doors open. They’re that cold.

I’ve always dreamt about fighting back. It’s hard not to feel righteous when you see an unshaven, overweight male yelling at a freshmen in college for having her car parked 7″ over the line. She cries and pleads as he continues with his “work”. I’ve often times dreamt about jumping in his truck, and towing him away. I’ve also dreamt about the sawed off shotgun he probably has locked and loaded.

Respect to this lady, she’s got more rice balls than I do.



18 Comments


  1. Wow! Nice post!
    I am one of those old men. Let me ask you a question. Do you get paid for what you do? Yes? Then why shouldn’t the tow operator that responded to someones complaint about you because your car was illegally parked?

    The deal you talk of is called a “drop fee” It helps us pay for our gas and time if we respond to remove your silly little car so we aren’t working for free. It is legal and morally correct to expect to get paid for the job we perform.

    You were never towed with a friend sitting in the car with the doors open. First off, that would damage the car, second, that would be kidnapping and if that really happened, we would have seen the news story. How about you post a link to it for us? You can’t? Imagine that. Just another, well you name yourself.

    You want to start a fight? I dare you to come make comments like that at my blog and/or my website. Lets see if you can stand the heat.

    Oh BTW, that video you are showing here was staged. A fake.


  2. Then why shouldn’t the tow operator that responded to someones complaint about you because your car was illegally parked?


    Because it wasn’t called in. Like many of the tow truckers in the area, this particular driver was scouring the alley at 3a.m., looking for a quick buck. I know this because the car was not there for more than 2 minutes, traffic was not blocked, and a girl was in the car. (You said yourself that a good tower can hook up your car in less than 30 secs.)


    The deal you talk of is called a “drop fee” It helps us pay for our gas and time if we respond to remove your silly little car so we aren’t working for free.

    Drive less. Save gas and time. Again, not a call in.

    It is legal and morally correct to expect to get paid for the job we perform.

    Just because something is legal, doesn’t make it morally correct. It’s more an issue of business ethics. You chose your profession. You knew going in that it wasn’t a socially popular position to be in. That aside, we both understand that the service you perform for the city are necessary. The choice you have to pick and choose your victims is what I criticize. The harassment and intimidation of your “clients” is what I criticize. The bullying of naive young drivers into a corner and giving them an out of a “drop fee” is exactly what I hate about the industry.


    You were never towed with a friend sitting in the car with the doors open. First off, that would damage the car, second, that would be kidnapping and if that really happened, we would have seen the news story. How about you post a link to it for us? You can’t? Imagine that. Just another, well you name yourself.

    I wasn’t towed because the tower was so kind to offer us a “drop fee”, even though a person was in the car. $250. That’s a month worth of food. There’s no link, just truth.


    How about you post a link to it for us? You can’t? Imagine that. Just another, well you name yourself.

    I found some links you might be interested in.
    Tow driver shows no mercy to assault victim

    Tow Truck Scam Victims

    Towing Utopia might have some more interesting points you’d like to discuss. Pretty neat blog, you should check it out.

    I hate to perpetuate the idea that all tow drivers are bad, I do not believe this to be true. I know they are a necessary evil and I respect their service. I just think there is room for improvement, legally and morally.

  3. It doesn’t matter whether they were called in or not, that tow operator has a responsibility to follow the contract he has entered into with that property owner. The idea here is to exercise that contract for remuneration and solve that property owners parking issues. That means, unless he does his job, he goes broke. These people (and yourself, I suppose) are not victims and I am offended by people that make such comments. The idea that we “pick and choose” which trespassers to tow (yes, they are ALL trespassers no matter who they are or what their personal situation might be) is just ludicrous.

    The “drop Fee” is allowed and is designed to pay the tow truck driver for his time and expense for having to respond to remove a trespasser. Even that is a hit and miss situation for the tower because many times he arrives only to find the offender has driven away and he gets nothing. Again, it’s not a scam by any stretch of anyone’s imagination except yours. The law is very clear about that. You might hate what we do but we wouldn’t have to do it if everyone like you would just respect the private property owners rights to begin with.

    What State did your drop fee situation happen in? I would like more info because even I think a $250 fee is a little high. I would do a little research on that with your local towing governing body. If the tower charged too much, usually there is a clause that will force him to give it all back. If there isn’t, I would recommend that your time would be better spent getting with your state legislature to enact or strengthen the laws in this area. Mouthing off in a blog about it in an attempt to slander an entire group of people is not going to get you anywhere.

    I appreciate the extra links to other stories (BTW, I will be getting to those too) but that is not what I asked for. I asked for the link about the story you told about the car being towed away with the doors open and someone inside? Now you are recanting that story. Was it an embellishment on your part to strengthen your position?

    Are you aware that a lie by omission is still a lie?

    Did you lie to me and everyone else?

    TTYL.

  4. Skyforum-
    What is the “standard” drop fee? Is it posted on a state governed website somewhere? It would seem a bit more credible if documents were provided rather than asking the driver how much they have to offer, or seemingly pulling the number from their head. Is this not a business transaction?

    I’m not stupid. I read signs. I park where I am permitted. The property it was parked at was mine. I lived at that complex. There is no property manager there nor is there a front office. The units are privately owned and said vehicle was perpendicularly parked directly behind my spot. It was between the hours of 2 and 3am. Please tell me who else would’ve called that in? Is it “disrespecting” property rights to park and unload? Traffic was still able to get through.

    This is merely one instance out of many that I have shared with friends. You have a point, maybe I should start speaking to my state legislature, but I have gotten more attention writing in this forum than I ever would have writing a letter/email to someone higher up.

    You might be the one white knight of the towing community Skyforum, but it doesn’t negate the fact that there are corrupt tow truck drivers out there that take advantage of the “system”. I hope your blog or website recognizes this, for a lie by omission…

  5. C’mon brother! You are giving us more info every time you post. Now, the car in question was parked behind your spot sideways?

    I bet there’s a rule about keeping the egress clear or double parking or a fire lane violation. The tow driver probably had no way of knowing you were loading / unloading or even that it was a car you approved to be there. It was, after all, 3 am in the morning. (who unloads at 3 am?) He has rules to follow, your vehicle was in violation of those rules by being parked sideways behind your car. Once he arrives, he must enforce the rules of the agreement he has with your property owner or manager.

    How is this scenario. I don’t believe you were “unloading” your car. Judging by the time you stated, I believe you had just arrived home from the bars with a few friends. You “unloaded” them and all went into your apartment for a nightcap. You were hanging out inside when the car got hooked and you happened to see him out your window. I will also bet that it was there far longer than 2 minutes. I think if someone was actually with the car at the time the tow operator showed up, it would have been obvious you were unloading and he would have never tried to take it.

    You’ve already proven your propensity towards the embellishment of the facts to suit your needs. I think it is time to just admit you booboo’d and got caught with your pants down.

    It really does come down to doing something you know is wrong but deciding that the risk of being caught is minimal. When you do get caught, it’s like you lost the competition. Instead of showing grace and congratulating the winner, you are having a temper tantrum about it and trying to convince everyone the other person cheated somehow.

    I think this conversation has played itself out and I see no need to continue it. I do thank you for allowing my posts to be seen and I hope you are successful in life’s ventures. Oh, and thank you for calling me the white knight of towing, I liked that. (made me feel useful somehow).

    Have a great day!

  6. I think I know a little about competition.

  7. Angel Roadside Servces

    It seems to me that Mr. ‘glowjangles’ believes in the moto… “The law is ALWAYS right, unless he is beaking it, and then HE (and only HE) is above it. ” The part that he might have neglected to see was that he most likely signed the agreement (parking rules) IN his tenant lease, but failed to read it.

  8. I hate to spark more anger but I have to agree with Glowjangles on this one. I have had my SUV towed before, (I am unaware of the association between the tow truck driver and the lot where the vehicle is held) while my car was sitting in the lot it was broken into and my upgraded stereo system was gutted. I understand this is most likely not the tow truck drivers fault but their association with the lot reflects on them and therefore tarnishes the reputation of any driver that drops off at that location. Before some one posts that I should have called the cops, I did and they politely gave me a complaint form, and said if enough complaints were entered they would check it out. Bottom line is that the towing industry has many instances of abuse of power, and while this does not apply in all instances it is by no means unheard of. I am sorry if tow truck drivers feel like the bad guys but the fact is you chose your profession. I am sure you could use your driving skills in another less persecuted profession.

  9. NNoXX, here we go again.
    While I can understand your frustration with your complex, it is not the fault of the tow operator that your car was towed.

    Why is your car being broken into an abuse of power on the towers part? If your car was damaged in some way while it was in storage why don’t you take them to court for the damages? Trying to lay a blanket of blame on the entire industry or even just on all the towers that do non consent tows does not help your situation at all.

    It seems pretty easy to prove that the car was damaged in their possession unless they took pictures of it before it was towed that showed the damage as pre existing.

    I know, maybe the cops got some kind of agreement with the storage facility for stereo radios? Or the drivers are dicing and slicing the cars in their yard that the cops KNOW they have? (Yes, every car that’s impounded in this country is immediately reported to the police and has a case number)

    The fact remains. You got your car towed because you broke the rules of your complex. You are mad about that and you are looking for someone to blame. The tow operator is not at fault who, by the way, is just the middle man in this whole situation.

    Lets try something different. I want you to put yourself in the property owners position. Now, tell me another way of dealing with abandoned and improperly parked cars. I will show you how each idea you come up with has been tried and why it didn’t work.

  10. Nice dude,
    You missed the point the fact is YOUR industry abuses its power regularly and your hiding behind complex rules or private property owners preference’s as a reprieve for your conscience does not change the industry reputation. The legal issue is not my point but merely that the industry has many instances of abuse. Again if you have a problem with the reputation your job has given you then get a different job. Bottom line is this, you drive to a location spend 30 secs working and drive somewhere else to spend another 30 seconds working and collect multiple hundreds of dollars for this “service”. I am not sure why you are so upset that you have a bad rep sounds like a few hundred for a total of 1 minute of ACTUAL work is a pretty nice deal.

  11. This is the exact reason there is a problem. We only come in to clean things up because people like you think it’s ok to break the rules or abuse someone else’s property. The legal issue IS the point! You abused someone else’s property in a way they did not wish you too. You trespassed or violated someones property in a way that forced them to take action!

    30 seconds is all it takes to hook a car, you are right but I wonder if you have any idea about the costs involved to be able to get to a point where I can do that 30 second hook.

    INSURANCE is one big one. Figure 12 to 18 grand per truck / per year.

    FUEL is another one. How much do you think it costs to fill a diesel truck nowadays? How about when the per gallon price exceeds $4 a gallon? Try doing it several times a day and see how long your puny arsed savings last.

    OFFICE EXPENSES. How much do you think it costs to run and staff an office 24/7 every stinking day of the year?

    LOT SECURITY. I won’t even go there when you start adding up the 480V 1200 Watt light bulb costs, (think 20 refrigerators running nonstop per bulb!) not to mention security cameras, fencing, asphalt, etc etc etc. Oh and lets not forget that bullet proof glass I need to have to protect my office staff from freaks like you.

    EMPLOYEE PAY. How much do you think it costs to pay a competent person do do this job 60 or more hrs a week?

    LEGAL COSTS from nitwits like you who think they can win some frivolous “I’ll show you MR tow guy” lawsuit. BTW, I have NEVER lost one.

    JUNK CARS THAT GET ABANDONED in our yards? How much you think they are worth when steel is at $40 or $60 a ton? More than 40% of the stuff we get is junk and has almost ZERO value.

    STOLEN CARS Interesting fact! 60% of the stolen cars found in this country are found by companies just like mine. Have you had yours stolen lately? What happened when you went to pick it up? I bet you weren’t even charged for it.

    1 minute’s worth of work is all you see.

    I do not have a bad rep. Everyone that knows me knows I am as honest as they come. I have to be because people like you are ALWAYS looking for a way to get back at me for keeping you in line and helping to defend the property owners in this country from your foul sense (or actual lack of) moral perpetuity! DUDE!

    Here it is in a nutshell. Don’t trespass or damage or use without permission a piece of private property in this country and you will never EVER meet me or anyone like me.

    Now, I’m done here. I think it’s time you grew up, got a real job and started taking responsibility for your own actions for a change….

    Oh one more thing. This is not all I do. All towers have to offer a range of services to make ends meet and I think you’ll find that every city tower does some level of impound work along with motor clubs, standard tows, accident tows and contracts, commercial repair shop tows and equipment moving. Without being able to diversify, we would never be able to service you when you call your motor club and expect a free tow because you don’t check the air in your tires or the oil in your engine.

    Of course I guess that would mean that you think ALL towers are abusive. Try taking that tact with the next guy that comes out to save you in a blizzard snow storm at -10 degrees and see how fast you turn into a NNoXX Popsicle. They are one and the same you know.

  12. Angel Roadside Servces

    NNoXX… I can understand parts of your (and glow jangles’s) frustrations. A point to ponder upon, though, please. Back in the day, when your grandparents were growing up, driving drunk was not concidered a hanious crime (parking illegally or withoutconcideration on PUBLIC or PRIVATE or YOUR property/parking spot, parking in MANDATED FIRE LANES). The Constables would just take one home, with a bit of humiliation thrown in (a ticket or the owner parking in front of you so you couldn’t get out) and let one go. Being there are habitual offenders (being generally a large PAIN to the public with, deaths and damages), rules and regulations were put in place (by the property owners, city/county councils,and state regulatory commisions) to curb, deter, and stop people from doing these actions. PLEASE REMEMBER…. YOU ELECTED THESE PEOPLE TO MAKE THESE RULES (OR SIGNED THE LEASE AGREEMENT). The general public saw fit to enact more stringent rules to deal with this problem with hefty fines, prison sentences, and loose of driver’s liciences for years on end (vehicle booted or towed and a release fee [STATE regulated] with a sprinkling of inconvenience thrown in for good measure). These are put in place to deter people from doing this again.
    Another way to look at towers/impounders is this: They are “Enforcers”, not law makers. The laws were made by somebody else, AND made to keep order amoungst all. If you find a dirty cop, what is that you do? Do you kill the cop?

    The point is this: The rules were not made by the tower/impounder. The rules were made by another entity… AND YOU AGREED TO ABIDE BY THEM. Now that you have been caught NOT abiding, and have been “served”, you scream foul. Who is actually worse here, the guy that got caught drunk driving or the cop trying to protect the general public…

    This story was blown out of proportion… But the point still sticks. Illegally parking (handicapped or fire lanes), parking in two spaces (let me take what I want and screw the rest of you), tresspassing (let me come into YOUR house w/out asking) is a PAIN for all involved and should not be tollerated. If you do not like the rules, try to change them, or then don’t live there, do business there, don’t drive, don’t own a vehicle…. OR SAY… HEY!!! LIKE ABIDE BY THE RULES!!!!

  13. Angel Roadside Servces

    BTW NNoXX… In reading your post about your stereo….
    1. Sorry to hear your radio got lifted…
    2. Did you follow through with the report?
    3. Towing companies are supposed to have security, and insurance, for just this kind of situation. Did you confront the company, ask for insurance information , and file a claim against them?
    4. You are making it sound like it is the fault of the tower that the radio got stolen. Yes the tower should have been more dilligent with the security of your vehicle, AND it happened while in it’s possesion, BUT the company didn’t tell the crook that your stereo was there and to come and get it.
    5. Yes, we chose our proffession. YOU chose to park, or infringe, like a twit. You did your “job” first… We are just doing ours.
    6.I take it that you may dislike lawyers, as well. Do you keep one one retention, and use him/her, or ever had to use one? Property owners keep us on ‘retention’ and exercise their right to use towers/booters when ‘wronged’.
    7. I have a problem with reputation with YOU (the infringers) that give the towing community, when YOU (the infringers) have gotten caught doing something YOU weren’t supposed to be doing, in the FIRST place.
    8. THE BIG POINT…. IF YOU DON’T GET CAUGHT WHILE DOING SOMETHING WRONG, IS IT STILL WRONG? Just follow the rules, and if you don’t like them then YOU change them!

  14. @ Angel Roadside Services and SkyForum. I want to be very clear about my situation for an example of my unfortunate encounter has turned into the focus of the post.

    I was NOT drunk. I was not drinking. I, in fact, was coming home from a competition. It was late and the town was asleep (save one tow trucker). I understand the risk of blocking an alley and the consequences that are associated with said risk. However, my car was not blocking the alley. (which was the reason he presented) If it was, I don’t see any physical way for the tow trucker to possibly hook my car up unless he drove all the way down the alley in reverse.

    The 18 year old girl in the car was scared shitless from the late night encounter and did not dare step out of the vehicle. Judging from the stories I’ve read, once truckers hook your car up, it’s no longer a question of legality, morality, or ethics, but rather a battle for pride. There was obviously someone in the car. I was obviously unloading gear from my trunk. The one and a half parking spots that were blocked were mine and my neighbors. No one called in. He would hear none of it. He did however listen to how much cash I had in my wallet.

    This was not about me trying to justify my gripes through unrelated examples. I have been towed for illegally parking before and I do not blame anyone but myself. This however was not the case. I clearly stated that I respect what service you provide, but it is extremely difficult for any of you to declare that there are shady, dishonest people in your industry who have tarnished the name of the tow trucker. Keep it real folks. There are good and bad professionals everywhere. It’s unfortunate that the bad ones ruin it for everyone else. But accusing me of drinking and driving is absurd. I see how you write off anything I’ve said because you assume that I was some punk college kid who was intoxicated. Wrong.

  15. Sounds like both of you should be towing cars right now instead of posting on the internet, if the costs of you business are so high. I have a real job and need to get it right about now. Apparently we struck a nerve with you “rouge Lawmen” as you would like us to believe. I will continue to despise people like you because in you minds the “law” is a ridged line that can never be crossed or broken in the slightest, though I doubt either of you can boast a life of firm following of the law. I am also done dealing with you… the bottom feeders of our society!!!

  16. Well, Mr glowjangles. If you would have just said that in the beginning, I think this thread would have taken a whole different direction.

    I too am done here. It’s not about winning or losing in this discussion but merely about giving you a new perspective into what it is that we do. I think you still harbor hatred for our industry and I do understand those feelings and where they might have originated.

    I also understand and am not denying that there are some very bad people in our industry that do take advantage in some of these cases. I also believe it’s a very small percentage of the time and the only reason it seems more is because of the media in this country creating a human interest feeding frenzy. They can and do take a single incident and blow it all out of proportion in the “interest of the public good” which really means “In the interest of selling the news for profit”

    I am hoping that our interaction here has at least given you food for thought.

    Have a great day and good luck.

  17. I also am a tower, who performs impound work. I found the above exchange to be highly informative, as it truly illuminates the feelings on both sides of the issue that make non-consent towing such a volatile issue, as well as one without any satisfactory resolution.

    Reasonable, mostly law-abiding folks become virulently angry when their car becomes impounded for an illegal behavior on their parts.

    Towers become proportionately defensive when their livelihood and professionalism is attacked by those who believe we deserve destructive retribution for performing an impound on illegally parked car.

    That in itself is not surprising. What is surprising is that the “victims” here, as in most of these exchanges, politely acknowledge that SOME impounds may be necessary, and so by extension towers may be a necessary evil, but that the towing laws and practices are essentially skewed, and towers that are contracted to uphold private property rights by exercising those laws are socially and ethically substandard in some manner.

    So, what I get from these arguments is that we towers are somehow supposed to have the patience of a saint, the observation and deduction skills of a talented negotiator, and the empathy of the greatest anthropologists, all so that when we arrive on scene at a vehicle placed illegally on private property we can use these skills and talents to determine whether or not this particular vehicle DESERVES to be towed.

    Nevermind that we are employed to remove ANY vehicle not in accordance with the property owner’s wishes, and nevermind that the property owner has the legal right to set ANY standard he or she chooses for vehicle removal.

    If we patiently listened to the driver’s reasons for being improperly parked, and sympathized with the necessity, or agreed with the driver’s assessment that they weren’t hurting anyone by being there, and dismissed the fact that the vehicle owner was breaking the law and subsequently abandoned the tow and drove away, WE WOULD STILL BE IN THE WRONG IN YOUR EYES.

    Why? Because you would be the angry person who goes to work at 2:00 am but was forced to be late because somebody was parked behind you, unloading their trunk. Or you would be the person who pays for a parking space just so your partner can use it on the weekends, and is infuriated that the rude folks next door “borrow” it all the time. Or perhaps you would be the frantic parent screaming helplessly at the clueless teenager that parked in the fire lane blocking the EMTs from accessing her building quickly enough to help her injured child.

    Bottom line, if a property owner doesn’t have a policy to tow every single vehicle that doesn’t specifically follow the rules, these types of scenarios will arise…and the property owner is, in every possible parking situation, of weary of them. So they hire us to do their “dirty work.

    And by the time they contract with a towing agency, they have disassociated themselves from the idea that vehicles are owned by real people, and they see only cars–problem cars.

    Towers, therefore, must see them as only cars as well. Cars that have broken the law. We cannot allow ourselves to differentiate between those cars with truly blatant disregard for the rules, and those that “aren’t really hurting anything.” Regardless of whether we are hired to tow on call, patrol and tow, monitor and tow, or simply perform a one-time service for the property owner, we must do it, regardless of how it makes the car owner feel, or how it affects the owner’s pocket book.

    And yes, we chose our profession. So yes, we should be able to take the heat. And for the most part we do. But just like non-towers, we fume about those of us that are especially crass or unprofessional about their work, because those behaviors reflect upon us all.

    But here is a final thought for those of you who would stereotype towers as old, unshaven men with bad attitudes forcing you into giving up the rent money. Perhaps multiple encounters with vehicle owners adamantly screeching about their god-given rights to do something illegal with their car has caused us to turn an overly deaf ear to the few that are speaking the truth. Perhaps being verbally and physically attacked when we are doing what we have been in instructed to do by the legal property owner has caused us to develop that bad attitude you think we shouldn’t have. And perhaps, just perhaps, if everybody who owned a car respected the basic rules of a society that values property rights, there would be no reason for mean old men to steal cars from innocent people that weren’t hurting anybody in the first place.

  18. Glow Jangles, I find this whole discussion from your standpoint comical because what your grievance really is, is the fact that you got caught breaking the rules and you got bit for it.

    I seriously doubt 250.00 for a drop fee, I know where I live the law states 50.00 as a drop fee standard, unless there is a outbound mileage cost 0r additional equipment/labor cost such as Go Jacks, Dollies, ECT.

    I find it funny that you act as though we are predators and that the business that we conduct is shady and unscrupulous.

    To explain my point I am going to tell you a bit about myself, Before I started my own towing company, I worked for another company here in town. There I earned the nickname “The Impound Hound” because I could drag in 4-7 Cars in the span of 3 1/2 hours 3-4 nights a week.

    The main parking lots that I towed from were a Office building that housed several doctors offices, and a bank parking lot that were bot adjacent to a large cowboy bar.

    There were nights that Id be driving the recovery pulling cars out of the lot up the street to waiting flat beds, and we could grab upwards of 10 cars.

    This would mean having a group of 20-30 people who were rather upset with the situation when the bar closed at 2:00am.

    Now each of these vehicles racked up an initial bill of about 156.65 including sales tax each. If I had a good night and drug in 7 cars, that is about 1096.55 total.

    One night after towing 4 cars, while grabbing number 6, I was approached by the owner of the club and offered two thousand dollars to stop towing, he was having a big night, and did not want his patrons disturbed because when the word got out that I was towing cars, everyone started leaving.

    I declined his offer however, Sure I could have stuffed 2 grand in my pocket and still got paid for 4 cars, but I did not. And the reason why is I told him that I shook a mans hand and told him I would do a job.

    I towed 3 more cars that night.

    Does this make me a rampant asshole who is out to nothing more than hurt and inconvenience people? Not in the slightest!

    Here is why, as I mentioned before, one of the lots that I towed from is a doctors office, well it just so happens that the doctors office on the side of the building that faces the club is that of a pediatrician.

    Why is this relevant? Well see knowing what I know about you from reading your previous posts here, I know immediately you were feeling compassion and empathy for the people who wound up hoofing it after I impounded their rides.

    The problem is the rowdy crowd that comes out of the BAR at 2:00 am likes to smash beer bottles and piss in the parking lot that at 8:00 am will be filled with soccer moms dragging their toddlers in to get a checkup.

    Do you think it is fair to the doctors office, or to the patrons there of to have to exit their vehicles in a urine soaked parking lot littered with broken glass left there by people who were ultimately trespassing?

    Or am I the bad guy for towing some ones car after they were stupid enough to drive right past a 19×24″ red and white reflective sign the bottom of which is between 3 and 5′ off the ground, clearly posted on every driveway to the parking lot facing the entrance.

    Really does that make me wrong and them right? Never mind the fact that some times these idiots would pull in and wait for me to pull a car out so they could park in the same place!

    Now I know what you are going to say, you are going to tell me that it is apples and oranges, that you were not parked at a party bar, that you were not drinking, you were coming from a competition right?

    Well you are still wrong and here is why, before you stated that the driver had to back up the alley a very long ways to hook to your vehicle. This means that he could not pass your vehicle in the alley, and that it was blocking the alleyway.

    I can guarantee you that if the tow truck could not pull around your car to hook on to it, that a fire truck, ambulance, or other such emergency vehicle could not do so either.

    There fore you are wrong, it doesn’t matter if you were parked there for 2 seconds or 2 hours, if you left your vehicle double parked, you were wrong.

    As well if the tow truck driver was actively patrolling the parking lot at your complex, then obviously there is a problem there with people parking vehicles places they are not supposed to be. That would mean that you are contributing to the problem, and your personal situation is unimportant and impertinent.

    I will say this though judging from what I have seen you write here, I personally feel as though you are in dire need of quite a few more humbling experiences.

Leave a Reply