Michael Allison, a 41-year-old backyard mechanic from
southeastern Illinois, faces up to 75 years in prison for an act
most people don’t realize is a crime: recording public
officials.
Allison lives in Bridgeport, Illinois, and often spends time at
his mother’s house in Robinson, one county to the north. Both towns
have abandoned property (or “eyesore”) ordinances prohibiting the
parking of inoperable or unregistered vehicles on private property
except in enclosed garages. These rules place a substantial burden
on hobbyists like Allison; to obey the law he must either build a
garage—which he says isn’t an option, given his property and his
income—or register, plate, and pay insurance on every car he fixes
up, even though he never drives them on public roads. So Allison
kept working on his cars, and the city of Bridgeport kept
impounding them: in 2001, 2003, and 2005.