There's also a second section that extends the misdemeanor charge to anyone present during "preparations" for said races and exhibitions. Preparations are loosely defined to cover everything after the very first person shows up at a spot—that includes just milling around a few parked cars waiting for something to happen.

"Often times, these individuals are doing these sideshows exactly because people are watching," San Jose Police Department Chief Eddie Garcia said to ABC7.

That's a fair observation, and the city's recent string of injuries and fatal accidents tied to street racing is a just cause. Set aside the debate on whether it's reasonable or even feasible for police to show up to a crowd of potentially hundreds of spectators and grab the small handful they can while everyone else slips away; let's also acknowledge that attending an illegal and dangerous event does make someone part of the problem. Still, the heavy-handedness on display here should concern both car enthusiasts and fans of reasonable policing alike.

It all hinges on the word "knowingly," which is left to the discretion of the arresting officer. Anyone who's ever attended a car meet—from formal Cars & Coffee-style events to a casual owners gathering—knows that it just takes one or two idiots to spoil it for everyone. If someone decides to spin their tires or even rev their engine (both of which are covered under the "preparations" section) within sight or earshot of a passing cop, they can theoretically arrest everyone present, even those who were just there to hang out.

Proving prior knowledge of someone else's burnout in that kind of situation would be challenging in court. Then again, so would convincing a skeptical officer that you didn't know what was about to go down in the moment. It's especially fraught when you consider the fact that sideshows often involve the sudden takeover of a public road or intersection with random passersby well within that 200 feet radius. As written, simply stopping and staring at the spectacle could potentially count as an arrestable offense.

The law is supposed to hold people accountable for their decisions to attend a street race or sideshow. What it also does is potentially hold people accountable for the decisions of complete strangers. So just how far will San Jose go in its enforcement? We're about to find out.

h/t: Jalopnik

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