{"id":10371,"date":"2025-12-11T10:00:00","date_gmt":"2025-12-11T11:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.undergroundz.org\/?p=10371"},"modified":"2025-12-12T09:44:08","modified_gmt":"2025-12-12T09:44:08","slug":"it-works-every-time-man-presses-help-button-while-exiting-parking-garage-then-he-discovers-a-loophole-to-get-out-for-free","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.undergroundz.org\/index.php\/2025\/12\/11\/it-works-every-time-man-presses-help-button-while-exiting-parking-garage-then-he-discovers-a-loophole-to-get-out-for-free\/","title":{"rendered":"'It Works Every Time:' Man Presses 'Help' Button While Exiting Parking Garage. Then He Discovers a Loophole To Get Out For Free"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/p>\n
A man says he\u2019s found a way to get out of paying to park in a garage. But is it legal?<\/p>\n
TikTok creator Jake (@jakewrantz) posted a video with the parking garage loophole he found over the weekend. He starts the video by saying, “OK, this is how you never, ever have to pay for parking garages. I\u2019ll tell you exactly how to do it. It works every time. I never pay for parking garages anymore.”<\/p>\n
Jake explains that you get your ticket and drive up to the window or ticket booth like normal.<\/p>\n
“There\u2019s like a little \u2018Help\u2019 button,” he says. “They\u2019re going to be unintelligible. They\u2019re going to be like the Peanuts character. So some person\u2019s going to come on from the help parking and go [unintelligible] and you just respond with the same [unintelligible]. And then you just keep going until they seem defeated and you\u2019ll be like, \u2018Can you just let me out?\u2019 You have to wait for like 30 seconds of silence and the gate will just open. You\u2019ll be home free.”<\/p>\n
While his method might technically work, it\u2019s not something law-abiding citizens will want to emulate, nor is it advice Motor1<\/em> endorses.<\/p>\n In general, parking garages display hours and fees in signage posted at the entrance. Of course, penalties vary by jurisdiction, but in Texas, for instance, it is considered theft<\/a> to “abscond without paying” for a service in a situation in which people are generally expected to pay immediately.<\/p>\n