Got a PPM parking ticket in the mail? You may be owed up to $2,500.
When Professional Parking Management uses DMV records to mail you a notice, federal law sets liquidated damages of $2,500 per violation, plus attorneys' fees and costs.
Check your eligibility
Five quick questions. Under 60 seconds. No obligation.
You may qualify if:
- You received a notice in the mail from PPM
- The parking lot was in Florida
- You never gave PPM your address directly
- It happened within the last 4 years
Why these tickets may be illegal
When a private parking enforcement company like Professional Parking Management mails you a violation notice, they need your name and address. Often, they get that information by pulling it from Florida DMV records.
Federal law restricts who can use DMV records and for what purpose. When DMV data is used outside permitted purposes, the person whose information was misused can sue for liquidated damages, attorneys' fees, and costs.
If you received a parking notice in the mail from PPM and never directly provided them with your contact information, you may have a claim under federal law. Dapeer Law represents consumers in these matters on a contingency basis. There is no fee unless we recover for you.
How it works
Check Eligibility
Answer five quick questions. Takes under a minute on your phone.
Free Case Review
A Dapeer Law team member calls you within 24 hours to discuss your situation.
No Upfront Cost
If we take your case, we work on contingency. No fee unless we recover.