Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Turn that loud music down — or pay a price

Starting Friday, Florida cops can issue tickets if sounds are clearly heard from 25 feet

- By Brett Clarkson

Starting Friday, police in the Sunshine State will be able to ticket drivers for playing music too loud from their cars.

The law makes it a noncrimina­l traffic violation for any driver’s music to to be “[p]lainly audible at a distance of 25 feet or more from the motor vehicle,” according to the legislatio­n.

Drivers will be dinged a fee of up to $114, according to nbcmiami.com.

Some think the law makes sense, saying they hope it will cut down on obnoxious noise levels in the public sphere.

“Living in the area where there’s a lot of downtown activity, there are cars that come through at 12 or 1 o’clock in the morning with their blaring music bumping through the neighborho­od,” Orange County resident Lamonte Gwynn told WESH Ch. 2.

“If [the law] is really to cut down on the noise, then I think it would help in some respect.”

Others decry the new rule as just another way for the state to make money at residents’ expense.

“To me, it looks like a money grab,” Jerome Douglas told WFLA.

Yet others complained that the loud music crackdown will give police a way to target racial minorities and serve as a trigger for warrantles­s searches.

“It’s a pretext to pull people over for other reasons,” St. Petersburg lawyer Richard Catalano, 61, told Palm Peach Post columnist Frank Cerabino.

“The law uses radio noise as a way not only for officers to do unwarrante­d drug searches but it includes a provision to impound the cars for up to three days for non-criminal traffic infraction­s if they happen during unsanction­ed beach parties, which are typically attended attended by young Black people,” Cerabino wrote in a June 26 column criticizin­g the law.

“If they have reason to pull somebody over that they’re kind of targeting because of music, and then they find weed or you get a subject resisting arrest, we’re violating civil rights left and right,” lawyer John Phillips said to Action News Jax.

“It’s a pretext to pull people over for other reasons.”

St. Petersburg lawyer Richard Catalano

 ?? JOHN MCCALL/ SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Cars and pedestrian­s on Atlantic Avenue in Delray Beach on June 7.
JOHN MCCALL/ SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Cars and pedestrian­s on Atlantic Avenue in Delray Beach on June 7.

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