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58 Colum. J.L. & Soc. Probs. 1 (2024-2025)

handle is hein.journals/collsp58 and id is 1 raw text is: 




















Towing After Timbs: Why Vehicle

       Impoundment Violates the

          Excessive Fines Clause

                     BY  ALIZA  M. TRESSER*


   The plain text of the Eighth Amendment prohibits the government from
punishing people with excessive fines. But until the Excessive Fines Clause
was  incorporated in 2019, it did not  apply to municipal  or state
governments. In applying federal doctrine to the local context, many courts
have not yet extended this guarantee to an obvious application: expensive
traffic and parking tickets compounded by the exorbitant costs associated
with towed cars or losing the car altogether at a lien sale. While towing
companies are third-party contractors, this Note argues that because police
authorize the towing companies to tow private vehicles and fine their
owners, these punishments fall within the bounds of the Excessive Fines
Clause. Additionally, whether fines related to car towing are excessive may
depend on the financial circumstances of the car owner. What may be a
manageable unplanned  expense for one person is not so for others and can
throw families living in poverty into economic insecurity and instability.
Given this exposure to instability, fines that are reasonable for one family
are not for another. Though  there is no explicit Eighth Amendment
protection against arbitrary impoundments, there is legal momentum
around the idea; a growing number of jurisdictions are finding Excessive
Fines  violations for vehicle impoundments.  This  Note presents a
comprehensive analysis of the Eighth Amendment Excessive Fines Clause
as applied to traffic and parking violations, especially when it results in a
car being towed without the consent of the owner.


    *  Executive Articles Editor, Colum. J.L. & Soc. Probs., 2024-2025. Runner-Up, Best
Note Competition, 2024. J.D. Candidate, 2025, Columbia Law School. The author would
like to thank her note advisor, Professor Clare Huntington, and the staff of the Journal of
Law & Social Problems for their thoughtful feedback and support.

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