A story about a car owner who parked an expensive 'supercar' in three disabled-only parking spaces in an apartment complex has sparked public outrage online.
On the 2nd, a post titled "A Villain Appears in Our Apartment Too" was uploaded to an online community. The author, who identified themselves as a resident of the apartment complex, stated, "This is the same apartment complex where the foreign car parking incident in front of the security office happened before, and now the same model villain has appeared again," and shared several photos.
The photos show a yellow Lamborghini Urus parked horizontally in the apartment parking lot. The parking space occupied by this vehicle spans three spots, all designated as disabled-only parking spaces.
Luxury supercar occupying three parking spaces reserved for disabled persons [Image source=BobaeDream capture]
Moreover, the owner of the supercar attached notes on the front windshield saying things like, "When I get off work late at night, there are no parking spots, so where should I park?" and "Give me one parking spot first, then report me."
Residents reported the car owner for habitual parking in disabled-only parking spaces due to parking difficulties, and it appears the owner retaliated by parking across three spaces.
According to KBS on the 4th, the car owner has been reported over 30 times for violating disabled-only parking regulations and is expected to be fined approximately 3 million KRW.
Unlike other designated parking spaces such as those for women or compact cars, disabled-only parking spaces are legally protected. Unauthorized parking by non-disabled individuals results in a fine of 100,000 KRW, parking obstruction incurs a 500,000 KRW fine, and improper use of parking permits carries a fine of 2 million KRW.
However, in cases of habitual violations like this one, there are no penalties beyond fines.
Meanwhile, a so-called 'parking villain' incident like this previously occurred in the same apartment complex in July with the same vehicle. At that time, the owner violated apartment regulations by parking improperly, and when a violation sticker was placed on the car, the owner asked for it to be removed. Upon refusal, the owner blocked the sidewalk.
After controversy arose among residents, the car owner eventually posted an apology and announced that the vehicle had been sold.
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