The Brightwood Park thugs didnât respect St. Lawrence Smithâs car any more than they respected him. Theyâd sit on the Mercedes and eat chicken wings, staring the 43-year-old auto exporter down when he came out of the house.
So after those thugs stuck a gun to Smithâs head, robbed and pistol-whipped him, it was no surprise that he lost the car as well. But the maroon 420 SEL wasnât carried off by the street toughs. It disappeared instead at the chain end of what is perhaps the cityâs most zealous towing company.
After the beating, Smith was treated for a concussion. He slept in a motel on New York Avenue, then a friend let him stay over for a few weeks. Her condo didnât have enough parking, so he got permission to leave his car at the motelâs parking lot. When he came to retrieve the car about a month later, it was gone.
âI went out thereâWhat the hell? Whereâs my car, man?â he says.
He learned that Younginâs Towing and Automotive had towed it as an abandoned car. Over the phone, Smith confronted the companyâs owner, James W. Gee Jr., who initially said the car wasnât there. Despite the pain in his head and Geeâs angry manner, Smith showed up at the Younginâs lot on Montana Avenue NE, along with two cops.
Gee, according to Smith, emerged with several rough-looking men. âWhat the hell you bring police onto my property for?â he said. Then Gee admitted that the Mercedes had been on the lot. âI took the motor. I took the transmission. Itâs my property,â he said, according to Smith.
As some car owners and automotive professionals tell it, thatâs not the only property thatâs become Geeâs. They say the 19-year-old wrecking business devours cars on flimsy pretexts, according to written complaints. They say that the rates for storage or auto work are exorbitant. They say that if Younginâs gets your car, you might never see it again. In the past three years, 11 people have complained to the Better Business Bureau, and two have sued. Now that his Mercedes is in pieces, Smith promises to file his own lawsuit this month.
âDemo,â a car dealer who declined to give his last name, tells his own tale of Younginâs woe while hanging out at an Advance Auto Parts store in Takoma Park . âThey tow my car, and when we check with the police, there was no record of the [vehicle identification] number,â Demo says. âOn Montana Avenue, I saw my car on site.âŚThe guy said, âGive me $1,200. You can get your car.â â
Towing companies canât just scavenge the roads. Whether responding to accidents or enforcing street signs, they act on the cityâs authority. That means car owners have certain rights, as long as theyâre there for the tow. You can request an estimate of charges, say whether your car will be towed in or out of the District, and ask that a tow be stopped. Once your car is towed, you have the right to inspect it.
These points are laid out in the District of Columbia Ownerâs Bill of Rights for Towed Vehicles. The last sentence states, âa towing business must agreeâŚto be courteous and show respect to citizens.â
Many of the complaints about Younginâs are complaints about Gee. His critics describe him as having a mean temper, a foul mouth, and a violent streak. Heâs picked up more than two dozen criminal charges over the years, according to D.C. Superior Court records. He was found guilty of unlawful entry and simple assault in 1978, disorderly conduct in 1983, and receiving stolen goods in 1985.
âI canât say anything about him because I work with him,â says one driver for a competing company. âHe is unlike anyone else. He does whatever he wants.â
Yashieka Anglin saw Gee get angry. She had paid Gee $220 to recover her car, which turned up after a theft with the ignition ripped out. A driver from another company was there at an arranged time to tow her car off the Younginâs lot. But when he pulled up, Gee got in his face, saying the lot was closed. âI was saying, oh Lord, theyâre about to fight,â Anglin says. âI put my hand on [Geeâs] shoulder. He turned around and looked like he was gonna hit me.â
âA lot of people are afraid of this guy,â says Robert Jacobs, who sued Gee. Younginâs towed Jacobsâ van from a spot downtown. The ticket said the van had been in an emergency no parking zone. Jacobs says no such zone existed, and the city ruled the ticket defective.
But Jacobs still couldnât get his van. He showed up at Younginâs twice with a lawsuit in hand, he says, and both times Gee tossed the papers out the door. Talking on the phone outside D.C. Superior Court, Gee locked eyes with Jacobs and fired the cheap shot. âHe said, âMotherfucker ainât got enough money to sue me. Got to have money to sue me,â â says Jacobs, who had his court costs waived and wrote his complaint by hand. âI said [to myself], âI ainât got a dime, but Iâm gonna fuck with you.â â
After more than two weeks, a court order forced Gee to release the van. If not for the order, Younginâs would have charged Jacobs almost $700. When he arrived to pick up the van, it wouldnât start. He called another tow truck.
Gee has his defenders. D.C. police Inspector Kevin Anderson recalls from his days on the street that while the people at Younginâs may have been aggressive, they were always eager to help out cops. âThey were a good friend to the police,â he says. âI never had a problem with Younginâs.â
And Mike Daley of competitor Platinum Towing says Gee is no different from any other business owner: Customers will complain, whether he makes a clean profit or not. âFrom my point of view, heâs beenâŚgood in my eyes,â Daley says. âI just do towing. I donât ask questions.â
In a small office beside rows of ruined cars, Gee defends himself against the hordes of angry customers. âThey start calling us motherfuckers. âMotherfucker, you towed my car,â â Gee says, explaining that he intimidates people only after they threaten him. âI do over 300 to 500 tows a week. You cannot please everybody.
âThere are two sides to every story,â he says. âTheir side and my side and the truth.â
He asks his receptionist, Valencia Jones, for her opinion on the deportment of Younginâs customers. âThey are nasty,â Jones agrees. âThey come in real mean and nasty; they donât come in like normal people, like, âYou got my car.â â
Waving a roll of $100 bills for emphasis, Gee claims he told Smith he could pick up his Mercedes, but Smith never came. He claims that Jacobs was lying about getting towed from a meter spot, and he says that he never tows without a valid ticket. He opens boxes of old tickets, just to prove it. âWe just donât go around taking peopleâs cars,â he says.
His enemies have one thing in common: âNo whites. All black,â says Gee, as he unrolls the bills and lays them in stacks. âThey donât know how to conduct business.â Asked if he means only black car owners give him trouble, Gee, whoâs black himself, insists: âAll African-American.â
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