Posted on 11/06/2015 8:17:12 PM PST by Cowman
Joel Ramer and his girlfriend got stuck off-roading this old Jeep Cherokee on a powerline road in Walpole, Massachusetts last week. Seems egregious that he was arrested for trespassing and disturbing the peace, but the $48,000 recovery charge is downright offensive.
Itâs unclear whether Ramer got slapped with a trespassing charge after calling for help, or if somebody spotted and busted him while he was screwing around in the mud. And yeah, you can be jailed for that in Massachusetts.
But after Walpole PD rolled up on him Fox25 says the cops called what is presumably their go-to recovery outfit, Assured Collision, to pull the mired vehicle out. After spending twelve hours on the job, Assured Collision lugged the Jeep XJ to their facility. Ramer went to collect it and was given a bill for $48,000 instead.
How the person behind their desk told him that with a straight face weâll never know, but Fox detailed what Ramer was being charged for:
âAssured Collision billed him $16,000 for an on-scene supervisor at $1,250 an hour. He is being charged more than $10,000 for an off-road recovery incident response unit. There is also a $5,000 fee for dangerous condition liability insurance. All the equipment and manpower totaled $48,835 for the 12 hour job.â
There was also talk of âhazardous materialâ conditions and proximity to powerlines adding to the danger of the scene.
Before we start tearing into the ridiculousness of all that I can tell you Massachusettsâ Statewide Towing Association has already responded to the Fox report; âsome of the line items in the bill exceed industry standards and some of those line items theyâd never even heard of.â
âSome of the itemsâ They say? Everything about Mr. Ramerâs situation seems excessive.
I could see it taking two drunk teenagers 12 hours to get a Jeep XJ out of a bog, but a professional recovery crew? Maybe if you count the time they must have spent going out to buy a new truck they effectively billed Ramer for.
Ten grand for an âoff-road recovery incident response unit?â You could buy another Jeep about ten times nicer than the one weâre seing here for that.
But this âdangerous conditions liabilityâ line might be the most ridiculous. Proximity to powerlines does not make conditions dangerous. Youâre in proximity to powerlines every time you go on the sidewalk.
Yes, operating aerial ladders and cranes near such lines could collide with a line and cause a problem. Nothing like that would have been needed to yank this old Jeep out of a mud pit.
Though now that I think about it, maybe they really did spend $10,000 on a ârecovery unitâ and rented a skyscraper-building crane for the task. But that would not have made a whole lot of sense, when a Jeep like this only weighs about 3,000 pounds and could probably have been pulled out with a John Deere tractor and a little determination.
I am staying and fighting.
I’ve been stuck in many substances.
You know what the worst is?
Pumice.
You just sink down into it as if it were packing peanuts.
Lesson: stay away from defunct volcanoes.
I guess I wouldn’t know pumice if I saw it. Or maybe I would now! lol
I got stuck between three trees on a slippery mud track in the Cascades of WA once. Two on the passenger side and one on the driver’s side. I really did think I was going to be walking 45 miles out of the mountains to my sister’s house that time.
Without doing too much damage I finally finagled it out of that one. Thankfully there was a hard bottom under the mud puddles.
I can attest to a lot of pumice around the Crater Lake area, FRiend!
Stay out da pumice! lol
If I ever make it back up that way I will take care
to stay out of the pumice traps. I’d love to see Crater Lake.
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