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'Belltown Hellcat' driver faces Seattle civil complaint after more violations of noise control code

Miles Hudson was ordered to adjust his vehicle's modifications, but the city says he is not complying.

SEATTLE — The city of Seattle has taken its battle with a driver of a controversially loud vehicle to the next level, filing a civil complaint against the man on Tuesday.

Miles Hudson, 20, was charged in late March with two counts of reckless driving. On March 29, Hudson was also given a noise control violation notice, in which the city demanded Hudson restore the vehicle to a condition that complies with the requirements of the Seattle Municipal Code by April 15 and to not operate a vehicle that causes sound that violates that code.

The violation notice also says Hudson would be fined $1,300 per day after April 15 that his vehicle was not in compliance, which would continue each day until it was corrected.

"It was almost nightly back in January. I'm on the 17th floor here. I would hear my windows rattle. It sounded like very loud backfiring,” said Belltown resident Chris Allen.

On April 16, a video was posted to the account showing an unknown woman driving the vehicle and revving the engine loudly, the city said. The video also shows the car "running several yellow or red lights in downtown Seattle."

The city's complaint says that on May 3, Instagram stories from Hudson's @srt.miles account showed him saying he is “switching cats with my homeboy Z.” The vehicle could be seen in the background of Hudson's story while he was sitting at a gas station, court documents say. 

Two days later, a video was posted to the same Instagram account showing a woman getting the keys to the vehicle. She then can be seen revving the engine at 2:15 a.m., court documents say.

“It should be an easy slam dunk to deal with this,” said Allen. “One single person is affecting thousands of residents, and he doesn't care. He is toying with us. It is frustrating to see."

Since 23 days have passed since the April 15 deadline, Hudson would owe the city nearly $30,000 in fines if he were forced to pay the daily maximum for that entire period.

Hudson's mother, Rebecca, is also named in the noise complaint. Per the city's complaint, she is the registered owner of the vehicle, while Miles is "an additional registered owner."

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