County Code Chapter 10.04 makes it unlawful to keep an abandoned, wrecked, dismantled or inoperative vehicle on public or private property in the unincorporated county for more than 10 days, declaring it a public nuisance subject to abatement. Penalties run from a $100 infraction up to a $1,000 misdemeanor.
Abandoned and inoperative vehicles are addressed by Riverside County Code Chapter 10.04 (Abandoned Vehicles) and the county's nuisance abatement framework. It is unlawful for any person to abandon, park, store or leave any licensed or unlicensed vehicle, or part of one, that is in an abandoned, wrecked, dismantled or inoperative condition on any private or public property within the unincorporated county for more than 10 days, unless it is lawfully stored on private property in connection with a licensed dismantler, licensed dealer or county-approved junkyard. Such vehicles are declared a public nuisance. Abatement follows a notice-and-hearing process: Section 10.04.070 requires a notice of intention to abate mailed by registered or certified mail to the property owner and the vehicle's registered and legal owners, with a statement of hearing rights. Under Section 10.04.130, unpaid administrative costs, attorney's fees and removal costs become an assessment against the parcel under Government Code Section 25845, transmitted to the tax collector with the same priority as other county taxes; a second or subsequent judgment can trigger treble abatement costs under Government Code Section 25845.5. County Code Enforcement also runs the Abandoned Vehicle Authority (AVA) program offering free removal of junk vehicles.
Section 10.04.140 makes a first violation an infraction (fine up to $100), a second up to $200, and a third or later violation on the same site by the same person a misdemeanor punishable by a fine up to $1,000, six months in jail, or both.
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