If a car is impounded, can the owner get it back before the end of the 28 days?
In addition, the owner of the vehicle can appeal to the Police against the impoundment on certain grounds. The grounds are that:
The enforcement officer who seized the vehicle did not have reasonable grounds to believe that the operator of the vehicle was contravening the prohibition on racing, etc; or did not comply with the prescribed notice requirements.
If, following successful appeal to the Police or the Court, my vehicle is released from impoundment, will a person still have to pay the towage and storage fees? If the appeal was successful because the enforcement officer who impounded the vehicle did not have reasonable grounds to believe that the person operating it was committing a street racer offence, you will not be liable to pay the towage or the storage fees.
Only a Court can
confiscate a vehicle
- What happens if a person is convicted a second time? If the person is convicted for "racing" offences committed twice within 4 years, the Court must confiscate the vehicle (except in cases of extreme hardship).
- What happens to a vehicle which is confiscated? The vehicle will be sold. The proceeds would be paid out in the following order:
- The costs of the sale, including seizure, towing and storage;
- Payment of any sum owing on the vehicle;
- Any outstanding fines;
- The offender.