Odd Laws You Could Get Pulled Over For While Driving In California
I’ve been living in California for almost a decade now and someone pointed out to me that it is law you put your lights on when using windscreen wipers. I didn’t realise this but do it anyway because I have a brain.
I’ve been living in California for almost a decade now and someone pointed out to me that it is law you put your lights on when using windscreen wipers. I didn’t realise this but do it anyway because I have a brain.
You may wonder why something so obvious has to be legislated, but California is a place where legislators feel they have to legislate the obvious. When someone has a career is based on how many laws they make, and then on top of that grandstanding on them helps to get re-elected, a state can end up with some real head scratchers and some genuine Captain Obvious laws.
Then of course, like anywhere, there are some bizarrely antiquated laws that for what ever reason never got struck down.
Here’s a mixture of all the above:
(1) In California, it can be illegal for a woman to drive while wearing a bathrobe. Although if you have driven in L.A you can be forgiven for thinking it’s perfectly legal to use the rearview mirror to do your makeup while drinking coffee and checking your Facebook feed… unless you’re wearing a bathrobe.
(2) You can actually be pulled over for driving too slow. The reality is that California and a few other “vacation” states actually recognises that a slow moving vehicle in normal paced traffic can be a hazard.
It also may be the most humiliating law for a petrol head to have to show up in court for.
(3) State law legislates that it is illegal to play “any sound amplification system” so loud that it can be heard 50 feet or more from the vehicle. I actually like this law because I don’t want to listen to other peoples terrible taste in music, but it’s rarely used as anything more than probable cause when cops want to check out someone they want to have a word with.
(4) It’s a misdemeanor to shoot at any kind of game from a moving vehicle, unless the target is a whale.
Here are some more local laws:
In the city of Arcadia peacocks have the right of way to cross any street, including driveways.
In Eureka, no matter how comfortable that concrete or tarmac may look it is in fact illegal to use a road as a bed.
In case you were thinking about it, if you visit Baldwin Park you’re not allowed to ride a bicycle in a swimming pool.
Chico has made it illegal to plant rutabagas in roadways. I have no idea rutabagas is but in case you ever end up in Chico also bear in mind bowling on the sidewalk is illegal as well as driving a herd of cattle down a street and planting a garden in any public street. Just to kill all the joy of it’s residents, Chico has ruled that detonating a nuclear device within the city limits will result in a $500 fine.
In Glendale It’s illegal to jump from a vehicle moving more than 65 mph…
… Sixty four miles per hour and you’re fine, but sixty five and your wearing these steel bracelets and coming me with me son. It’s also illegal in Glendale to jump into a passing car, and cars may not be driven in reverse.
Good news though, contrary to popular belief, it’s not illegal for anyone in California to drive while barefoot.
So there’s that.
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Matt Robinson Ten Tenths Podcast Mark Mason Chadkake (Subaru squad) (minivan squad) gary
and I’m sure that most people in california don’t know about most of these laws haha
64 miles per hour car jumps being okay is just terrifying.
And rule number 3 must not have been enforced much in the city of Bakersfield between 1994 and 2008. Thumping bass rattle from a Honda Civics trunk was an everyday sound. Like how birds chirping and the occasional yapping dog are the common sounds here in rual/distant suburb of Portland, Oregon
64 mph car jump. For those times you wake up from your power nap and realise you’re driving a Prius
The 2nd California law actually makes a lot of sense. Slow moving vehicle can be considered as a stationary obstacle which would be hazardous to faster moving vehicles. People who may see it a bit too late to respond to it, would then be a matter of clearing up with the insurance.
The 3rd law also makes sense especially for the electric cars to emit sound of certain frequency… a decision that the government wants to take so as to ensure safety for the visually impaired people. That would just get annoying constantly listening to an audio of 100Hz or lower lol.
It does, and it’s there because of tourists and rubberneckers.
Bassheads in the future be like : Drop the bass (Steps on the throttle)
“You can actually be pulled over for driving too slow.”
NO MORE PRIUS DRIVERS!!!!
Except they drive 80-90 mph…somehow
James May
Oh come on I always visited Chico to test my nuclear arsenal and now you want to say me it is illegal? :(
Congratulations you made it on a watchlist :D
The best part tho is the 500$ fine.
Like 500 BUCKS ONLY
WHY
If you have enough for a nuke, you can afford the fine
So if something goes wrong in my car and i need to bail out that illegal. Tf was i supposed to die.
Here in Europe u cant get pulled over because they all drive Škoda Octavias.
Bahaha was in Dublin once and saw the police chase a ricer in an Opel Astra
There’s a reason for everything
Doesn’t mean it’s a good reason, or a logical reason even.
So… Why the hell then shooting whales from a moving car is legal?
Is smoking weed legal there? If so, you know…
State level it is now, but not to drive. Existing laws already address intoxication and drug driving includes alcohol.
I’d like to see some of these laws lol. They can’t be worded the same way. I’m sure “can’t use a road as a bed” was actually spelled out to indicate it’s illegal to sleep on a public roadway (a law many states have to stop truckers and people with RVs from sleeping on the side of the road).
I chuckled at the bicycle in a swimming pool one