Woman gets parking fine after flood dragged her car to illegal zone
Share and Follow

A medical student in South Carolina ended up with three parking tickets after a flash flood relocated her car into a tow-away zone last month.

Anna Brooks had parked legally near her medical school but upon returning, discovered her car was partially submerged in floodwaters with parking violations plastered on the windshield.

‘I had to ask myself, “Where’s my car?”‘ Brooks shared with Fox Weather. ‘Once I found it, I saw the parking tickets, which was not ideal,’ she said.

The storm that battered Charleston dumped more than 11 inches of rain in two days, turning streets into rivers and lifting Brooks’ car just a few feet. But it was enough to nudge it into a restricted zone.

Emergency officials urged residents not to travel, multiple roads were shuttered, and photos showed entire neighborhoods swallowed in knee-high water. 

Brooks, a newly arrived student in town, had only just moved to the area for school and had parked her car on a seemingly quiet side street just a few blocks from her campus. 

She did not know that the street she had parked on is notorious among locals for becoming a canal during heavy rain. 

‘I think people think that my car literally was like a boat,’ she joked. ‘But it didn’t float that much. It really only floated just a couple of feet’, – but a couple of feet was all that it took.

A Charleston medical student was hit with three parking tickets after her car was swept into a tow-away zone by a flash flood that pummeled the city last month

A Charleston medical student was hit with three parking tickets after her car was swept into a tow-away zone by a flash flood that pummeled the city last month

Anna Brooks, pictured, had originally parked legally near her med school but returned to find her vehicle half-submerged in floodwaters, with its windshield covered with parking tickets

Anna Brooks, pictured, had originally parked legally near her med school but returned to find her vehicle half-submerged in floodwaters, with its windshield covered with parking tickets

As the waters surged, Brooks’ car was dislodged and pushed into a designated tow-away zone, where it came to rest. 

By the time she tracked it down, the vehicle was half-submerged.

‘I tried to get to it, but me just walking toward my car actually made it drift off,’ she recalled.

Following the floods, first came one ticket but as the car sat stranded in the floodwaters, the vehicle was slapped with another. 

Finally, a third citation was issued even after Brooks had already begun the process of contesting the first two.

The absurdity of the situation was not lost on Brooks, who posted a video on TikTok that quickly went viral.

‘To the individual who gave me parking tickets,’ she wrote in the caption, ‘my car floated here!’

The video, showing her car lodged awkwardly between a streetlamp and a flooded curb with soggy tickets slapped under the wipers, racked up thousands of views and comments.

Many were outraged at the city’s lack of leniency in what was clearly an act of nature, rather than negligence. 

A vehicle is stuck on a flooded street due to Tropical Storm Debby on August 6 in Charleston

A vehicle is stuck on a flooded street due to Tropical Storm Debby on August 6 in Charleston

A street is seen after being flooded by Tropical Storm Debby last month. Flooded Charleston is pictured

A street is seen after being flooded by Tropical Storm Debby last month. Flooded Charleston is pictured 

‘As an attorney, I would like to state this is a great defense and you should absolutely fight the tickets. But, also, lol,’ wrote one user.

‘Charleston will ticket you in the middle of a hurricane,’ deadpanned another.

‘Talk about the fact the roads are literally undriveable and they’re still out there giving tickets to people,’ added a third.

In the weeks since the parking violation Brooks has attempted to have the fines waived. 

‘I went to the appeals office but they gave me a second ticket because my car was still there,’ she said.

Ultimately, Brooks succeeded in getting two of the three tickets annulled, reducing her total fine to $35 from $135, but by then, her car had been totaled by flood damage and impounded by the city – all before her insurance company could retrieve it.

The weather was so severe that Charleston imposed a curfew in its downtown peninsula lasting more than a day. Pictured, a person walks his dog in a flooded street

The weather was so severe that Charleston imposed a curfew in its downtown peninsula lasting more than a day. Pictured, a person walks his dog in a flooded street

Charleston, with its low-lying topography and outdated drainage infrastructure, has become increasingly vulnerable to flash floods – a threat that’s only grown more severe as climate change pushes storms to become slower and wetter.

‘It only takes about 12 inches of water to float a mid-size car,’ FEMA warns. 

‘People told me that street flooded, but I didn’t realize how fast it would happen, or how much damage it would do,’ Brooks explained.

Share and Follow
You May Also Like
Cubs fan dragged out of stadium in handcuffs in crazy playoff scene

Cubs Fan Escorted Out of Stadium in Handcuffs During Wild Playoff Incident

A disruptive Cubs fan was escorted out of American Family Field midway…
Man dies from gunshot wounds after Jacksonville shooting

Jacksonville Shooting Claims Man’s Life

Detectives with the JSO Homicide Unit and the Crime Scene Unit are…
Judge blocks Trump from sending National Guard into Portland

Court Prevents Trump from Deploying National Guard to Portland

An Oregon federal judge has temporarily halted the Trump administration’s plan to…
Trump administration offers teen migrants $2,500 to leave US voluntarily: reports

Trump administration offers teen migrants $2,500 to leave US voluntarily: reports

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! The Trump administration is…
Diddy's former protégé Aubrey O'Day issues 'warning' after sentencing

Diddy’s ex-protégé Aubrey O’Day gives ‘caution’ following court ruling

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ former protégé Aubrey O’Day issued a chilling ‘warning’ after…
Feds acting like ‘white supremist organization': Chicago official

Chicago Official Accuses Feds of Acting Like a ‘White Supremacist Organization’

() A Chicago alderperson who was handcuffed by federal immigration authorities while…
Noem: NFL ‘won’t be able to sleep at night’ over Bad Bunny Super Bowl performance

Noem Claims NFL Will Regret Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Show

(The Hill) — Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the NFL will…
Are banks, post offices, UPS and FedEx open on Easter, Good Friday?

USPS Announces Temporary Price Hike for 2025 Holiday Season

Shipping gifts may cost you more this holiday season. WASHINGTON — The…