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Here’s everything you need to know about Florida’s new ‘license plate’ law

HB 253 went into play on Oct. 1

ORLANDO, Fla. – Nearly 30 new Florida laws took effect earlier this month, including a law that sets more rules surrounding license plates.

That law — House Bill 253 — makes several changes to existing rules regarding motor vehicle crimes in the state.

For example, HB 253 sets up harsher penalties for drivers who try to mimic a police officer with red-and-white lights while trying to pull someone over.

[BELOW: Here’s what to know about Florida’s newest ‘license plate’ law]

But HB 253 also says that alterations to license plates now constitute a second-degree misdemeanor, rather than a noncriminal traffic violation.

This applies to any of the following situations:

  • Mutilating or defacing a registered license plate
  • Changing the plate’s color
  • Applying reflective material, spray, covering or anything else that can obscure the plate
  • Attaching an illuminated device that can prevent someone from reading the plate

[RELATED: Here are all the new Florida laws that took effect on Oct. 1]

As such, anyone found liable under this law may face a $500 fine and up to 60 days in jail.

New crimes under HB 253

However, that’s not all. Under this law, people are also entirely prohibited from doing the following:

  • Buying or owning a “license plate obscuring device”
    • Second-degree misdemeanor — Punishable by up to 60 days in jail and a $500 fine
  • Creating or selling a “license plate obscuring device”
    • First-degree misdemeanor — Punishable by up to 1 year in jail and a $1,000 fine
  • Using a “license plate obscuring device” in the commission of a crime
    • Third-degree felony — Punishable by up to 5 years’ imprisonment and a $5,000 fine

What counts as a “license plate obscuring device?”

HB 253 defines this term as follows:

“...A manual, electronic, or mechanical device designed or adapted to be installed on a motor vehicle for the purpose of:

1. Switching between two or more license plates to permit a motor vehicle operator to change the license plate displayed on the motor vehicle;

2. Hiding a license plate from view by flipping the license plate so that the license plate number is not visible;

3. Covering, obscuring, or otherwise interfering with the legibility, angular visibility, or detectability of the primary features or details, including the license plate number or validation sticker, on the license plate; or

4. Interfering with the ability to record the primary features or details, including the license plate number of validation sticker, on the license plate."

House Bill 253

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