Shaheed’s attorney Will Aronin says even after scrapping her car and keeping the profit, the city still insisted she owed her ticket fines.
“Can you imagine losing your car for a couple of parking tickets or a couple hundred dollars in parking tickets? What is that, five tickets? And then, them still coming after you? It’s so disproportionate and it’s so offensive,” Aronin said. “The idea that they take the car, don’t credit it towards the parking tickets and don’t return the extra value is staggeringly unconstitutional.”
Aronin works for the Institute for Justice which focuses on making sure the Constitution’s protections of property rights, free speech, economic liberty and educational rights are upheld. IJ is representing Shaheed and fellow Wilmingtonian Earl Dickerson who had a similar situation happen with his car.
The lawsuit claims Dickerson’s van was towed after he was ordered to move it within seven days. Aronin said Dickerson missed the deadline while dealing with the death of a grandchild.
Even after paying the $60 ticket, Dickerson claims the towing company demanded $910 in storage fees before releasing the car back to him. When he didn’t pay, the company sold the vehicle for scrap and kept the proceeds.
“I’m looking to get my car, or the value of my car back so that I can relax and try to rebuild what I’ve lost,” Dickerson said in the IJ video.
The Wilmington lawsuit claims the city’s towing contractor City Towing Services towed 2,551 cars in 2020, keeping 987 of them, more than 38%.
Wilmington’s contract with the towing company doesn’t cost the city anything. Instead of being paid by the city for towing and impounding cars, the towing company collects fees from car owners. The lawsuit says that creates “an obvious incentive problem: the only way for its private contractors to make money was to sell, scrap, keep, or otherwise dispose of the cars that they towed.”
“So, we should not be surprised that that’s what happened. Incentives matter,” Aronin said. “We’re suing to say this entire system is unconstitutional.”