Sleepless in Seattle as a Hellcat Roars Through the Streets - The modified Dodge Charger roaming Seattle’s downtown by night has infuriated residents. But it seems no one can stop it.

As much of Seattle tries to sleep, the Hellcat supercar goes on the prowl, the howls of its engine and the explosive backfires from its tailpipes echoing off the high-rise towers downtown.

Windows rattle. Pets jump in a frenzy. Even people used to the ruckus of urban living jolt awake, fearful and then furious.
Complaints have flooded in for months to city leaders and the police, who have responded with warnings, citations, criminal charges and a lawsuit, urging the renegade driver to take his modified Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat from the city streets to a racetrack. Instead, the “Belltown Hellcat,” with its distinctive tiger-stripe wrap, has remained on the move.

For hundreds of thousands of people with Instagram accounts, the driver is a familiar character: @srt.miles, otherwise known as Miles Hudson, a 20-year-old resident of one of the Belltown neighborhood’s pricey apartments. For all the aggravated residents who view him with increasing disdain — “Entire neighborhoods are angry and sleep deprived,” one resident wrote their local council member — many more are tracking his escapades on social media, celebrating a life unencumbered by self-consciousness or regret.

When Mr. Hudson posted a video (350,441 likes) showing his speedometer topping 100 miles per hour during a downtown outing to get boba tea, a follower asked: “How does it feel living my dream?” When he posted a video (698,858 likes) showing the rowdy rattles of the Hellcat, another replied: “You really make the town so fun at night.”

In one self-reflective post, Mr. Hudson captured video (69,742 likes) of himself watching a television news segment that discussed the city’s concern about his driving, and proceeded to rush frantically around the apartment, pretending to be fearful that the police were on to him. “I like your content so when they arrest you I’m coming to get you,” one follower replied.

On one recent night when a police officer stopped Mr. Hudson, he pulled out his phone to show the officer his Instagram account and endeavored to explain that he was professionally unable to alter his late-night driving habits.


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Police bodycam footage released by the Seattle City Attorney’s Office showed an officer urging the driver, Miles Hudson, to take his modified Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat to a racetrack.​

“If it’s essentially wildly outside of factory, it’s an issue. What’s that?” “Do you know the factory setting?” “Yeah, I’m an ASE certified master technician as well as a cop, believe it or not. I have a car that would smoke yours.” [laughing] “I mean —” “You just got to keep it on — dude, why don’t you go to Pacific Raceways?” I don’t, I don’t race. I do this. I do this on social media.” “I know. But you know how much more popular it would be if you were doing it on a track?” “I mean, I got almost 700,000 followers.” “What’s that? “I’ve got almost 700,000 followers.” “Seven-hundred thousand what?” “Almost 700,000 followers.” “Yeah?” “Yeah.” “What do you mean? I’m just saying, like —” “I’m not, no disrespect, but I feel like I’m doing my thing.” “I know, you’re doing your thing. But, but —” “[unclear], and the car is paying for itself — 650,000 followers.” “I got you, dude. But doing it, but doing it legit and not on the street is going to be safer. Like, remember when we talked last time? Do you remember — the last time you got pulled over in Seattle?” “I’ve been pulled over a lot.” “You only got pulled over once up in the North Precinct since I pulled you over.” “Well, I didn’t —” “For S.P.D.” “No, I got pulled over, pulled over in Kirkland, but that wasn’t —” “OK, so you live in Seattle, right? You’ve been pulled over three times in Seattle. Once was an officer in the North Precinct. Once was me in January and now it’s me again.” “No, it’s been more than, I mean, maybe those are the only times I got tickets I’ve been pulled over —” “No, no, I didn’t ticket you last time, I told you you car was cool, and I told you you needed to slow down.”


Police bodycam footage released by the Seattle City Attorney’s Office showed an officer urging the driver, Miles Hudson, to take his modified Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat to a racetrack.CreditCredit...Seattle City Attorney’s Office

“No disrespect, but I feel like I’m doing my thing,” he told the officer, according to body-camera footage. “I’ve turned it into a career, and the car has paid for itself. 650,000 followers.”

To some residents, the city’s failure to stop Mr. Hudson’s exploits is but another example of its inability to bring an end to the homelessness, street crime and occasional mayhem that have plagued the downtown area since the pandemic. And it all raised a mystifying question about the incentives of modern life: What happens when fame and infamy can be equally lucrative?

The Belltown neighborhood has been transformed in recent decades from a grungy, semi-industrial arts district to a sort of ideal of moneyed urban living, with bike-friendly streets, hip cafés and condo towers so desirable that one penthouse there became the setting of the steamy “Fifty Shades of Grey” book series. This month, the rooftop of one such luxury tower featured a $1.7 million McLaren sports car to entice a prospective buyer. Other rooftops feature decks with lounge chairs and firepits, offering views of the Space Needle in one direction and waterfront sunsets in the other.

Mr. Hudson’s own Belltown apartment showcases panoramic views, decorated inside with neon lights and anime artwork. In his online postings, he can be seen playing video games and consuming iced pumpkin cream chai tea lattes.

He debuted the Hellcat seven months ago on Instagram, showing off the power of its engine and the interior ceiling lights that looked like a night sky. He casually took viewers along on an outing to Starbucks.

It did not take long, though, for a different social media story to emerge, one of unfolding chaos, narrated by Mr. Hudson in breathless expletives as he rolls around the city. If not out in his car, roaring through the streets, he is in the apartment, late at night, trying his hand at cooking.


In one video (669,757 likes), he got off the couch to ride a hoverboard over to his kitchen to cook some burgers, but the pan soon burst into flames, and Mr. Hudson raced around on his hoverboard trying to contain it. He had a fire extinguisher on hand in a later video when he tried to fry Twinkies. There was no fire this time, but the Twinkies were charred to a crisp. “I can’t cook,” he shouted.

His refrigerator, shown in another video (886,343 likes), looked to be barren save for some condiments and Lunchables.

Through the bleak Seattle winter, he posted about modifications to his car. In a video with nearly 700,000 likes, he could be seen out on the street at 2 a.m., starting it up. “It sounds like a shotgun,” he said, and asked his followers if it was too loud.
“Never too loud, I say not loud enough,” someone replied.

For the neighbors, the vehicle was plenty loud, and complaints were pouring in to city officials. One woman wrote that she lived with P.T.S.D. and woke up in fear because the backfiring vehicle sounded like gunshots outside her building. “This is the first time in 13 years that I’ve started seriously considering moving out of downtown,” she wrote. Another wrote in after 6 a.m. saying the tiger-striped Hellcat had been revving up and down streets for two hours. “What will it take for this to end?” the man wrote.

Chris Allen, who lives in the city center, said the backfires sound like explosions rattling the windows of his 17th-floor unit. While he regularly used a white-noise machine to drown out the blare of motorcycle and emergency vehicles, the machine was no match for the Hellcat, said Mr. Allen, adding that he has appealed to Meta, which owns Instagram, to take down Mr. Hudson’s account.

“He’s clearly committing crimes,” he said. “He’s documenting it on Instagram. It’s frustrating that Instagram hasn’t taken this down.”
Eventually, though, the wheels of bureaucracy began to turn. Police officers stopped Mr. Hudson once in January, giving him a warning, then again in February, giving another warning.

During the early morning hours one night at the beginning of March, the police stopped Mr. Hudson yet again. This time, he was cited for having a modified exhaust system that amplified noise. Mr. Hudson soon paid the $155 fine.

And the complaints kept coming. A couple weeks after the citation, Mr. Hudson posted a video (79,267 likes), recording himself starting the car remotely from his apartment balcony. Below, on the street, the vehicle roared to life, exhaust blasting out the tailpipes. Mr. Hudson then panned across the Seattle skyline.

“I am the Arkham Knight,” he said, referring to the Batman villain. “I am actually the Arkham Knight. My city actually hates me.”
For the police, the Instagram videos were a trail of criminal breadcrumbs around the city, complete with narration, time stamps and footage of his speedometer.

At the end of March, the city charged Mr. Hudson with two counts of reckless driving for “operating a motor vehicle with a willful or wanton disregard for the safety of persons and/or property.” At yet another traffic stop a few days later, an officer brought out a decibel meter, recording the Hellcat at 84 decibels even while idling, the equivalent of a diesel train.

Mr. Hudson declined to talk to The New York Times without payment, but he told a reporter at The Seattle Times in March that the city needed to focus its attention on other problems. “There are way bigger issues than a Black man with a nice car who makes noise occasionally,” he said.

At that point, a different city department stepped in. The Department of Construction and Inspections sent a notice, saying it had “investigated and found a violation or violations of the Seattle Noise Control Code.” Mr. Hudson was ordered to modify the vehicle and to not “operate any motor vehicle that causes sound in violation of the Seattle Municipal Code.” The notice came with a potential fine of $1,300 per day.

To the new city leadership recently elected in Seattle, many of whom had run on law-and-order campaigns, Mr. Hudson has become an example to be made. Bob Kettle, who represents Belltown on the City Council, said that something needed to be done about what he described as the city’s “permissive environment.”

“It’s shocking that somebody can make money by disturbing or impacting thousands of people on a nightly basis,” he said in an interview.
Mr. Hudson responded with a new tactic. In answer to the city’s orders not to drive his car, he posted a new video (528,359 likes) in which he could be seen getting in the passenger seat of the Hellcat, with a woman at the wheel. She drove them away, the car roaring once again.
Now the city is trying a new strategy: The city attorney this month filed a civil complaint, seeking a court order to force Mr. Hudson to modify his vehicle and penalties that could total tens of thousands of dollars.

A response came, from a different authority figure: Mr. Hudson’s mother, Rebecca Hudson. In an email to city officials, she said the Hellcat was off the streets and in the shop.

“This letter is just informing and responding to you that I am working on it and he is no longer driving the car or having it in his possession,” she wrote.

For a couple of weeks, Mr. Hudson’s Instagram account (now up to 758,159 followers) remained quiet. Some people began to hope that the saga was nearing an end.

Then, late one night last week, residents reported hearing the Hellcat once more. Someone captured a video of the tiger-stripe vehicle. It was, they said, as loud as ever.

Mr. Hudson posted the clip to Instagram: “Villain arc,” he wrote.

 
You know, listening to car guys, you'd think the gummamint, the EPA, and all of the other alphabets made it where you couldn't even look at your car funny without a swat team knocking down your door, and now I'm being told a nigger can do whatever he wants to his car and the police have to talk to him like a soyjak redditor?

Something doesn't seem right here.
 
It's 120 degrees here in the summer, I live literally on the surface of the sun. Give me my 5%.
Yeah. I tinted my windows since it's not nice entering your car after it's been out in the sun for a few hours. It relieves the heat a bit
 
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Part of me feels like Seattle whites can reap the retard whirlwind. Another part of me finds it grim how fast you can destroy a high trust culture from the inside out by insisting that blacks are oppressed by the same rules everyone else has to follow, creating a doom loop that will crash the system.

Anyway I’m 5% more racist after reading this article.
 
Y'all voted to make buying and owning guns in this state a nightmare and made it clear black people can basically do whatever the fuck they want in King County, which he currently is, so I think this is exactly the Symphony of the Night these fuckers deserve.

The real question is can the exhaust be made LOUDER?
 
New update: Seattle city attorney seeks $83K in penalties against infamous 'Belltown Hellcat' driver (Archive)

SEATTLE — The Seattle City Attorney's Office filed a motion in court Friday alleging Miles Hudson, the so-called "Belltown Hellcat" driver accused of racing his Dodge Charger through city streets and waking people up with his loud exhaust, has failed to respond to the city's lawsuit and is subject to $83,200 in penalties.
Hudson has been ordered by a court not to drive the Charger and the city issued him a notice of violation for the excessive noise with an order to remove the car's illegal exhaust system, according to prosecutors.
The city attorney's office alleges Hudson continues to "flaunt" his Charger's excessive noise on his Instagram account.

"Mr. Hudson has cultivated online infamy by flagrantly breaking Seattle's laws and waking his neighbors with excessive noise. It’s time for him to face the consequences of his actions. That’s why I have requested that the court find Mr. Hudson in default and award the City all applicable penalties,” City Attorney Ann Davison wrote in a statement.

Videos obtained by the city attorney's office allegedly show Hudson in his car last week as the exhaust revs outside an apartment building in the University District. A male's voice in the video can be heard screaming 'wake up b----' as someone is revving the car's engine.
Court filings by the city attorney allege Hudson was supposed to submit proof that the car's exhaust system has been fixed, but prosecutors say he has failed to comply with the order. Hudson is subject to fines of $1,300 every day his car is not fixed, according to court records.

"In the two months since that notice of violation, Mr. Hudson has failed to remove the illegal modifications or address the excessive noise," the city attorney's statement says.
In March, the Seattle City Attorney’s Office charged Hudson with two counts of reckless driving, alleging he posted videos of himself driving 107mph on Fourth Avenue South.

Seattle police had previously issued Hudson four infractions and noted multiple complaints received by citizens complaining about the noise and speed from Hudson’s Charger.
A Seattle police officer, who is also an certified automotive technician, noted the exhaust of the Charger was illegally modified to backfire, creating an "exceedingly loud" noise that is equivalent to gunshots or fireworks. The officer noted he had seen and heard Hudson’s Charger in downtown Seattle multiple times.

“This audible disturbance made it self-evident that the vehicle was under wide open throttle, with the driver utilizing the maximum performance of the engine in the downtown corridor. The noise would continue to grow louder as the vehicle approached my location(s). Eventually, the same Charger would appear, driving at extremely high speeds, running traffic lights, and making unsafe lane changes as it drove by,” the officer wrote in his report. “A citizen approached me and informed me that he was a nearby resident, and asked if | could hear ‘the hellcat’ referring to the edition type of Hudson’s Charger. | affirmed that | did hear the vehicle. He went on to explain that the owner of the vehicle was doing this on a regular basis, and that he, and other residents were ‘absolutely sick of it’. He described Hudson’s vehicle and its unique features saying that officers needed to ‘do something’.”

On March 20, Seattle police pulled Hudson over after seeing him speeding on Yesler Way in downtown Seattle.
"I ended up having a prolonged conversation with him that I captured on my bodyworn video. I asked Hudson why he didn’t just go to a racetrack to utilize his vehicle there. He stated that he had “almost 700,000 followers” on his social media, and that the amount of money he makes on filming his videos of him in his vehicle on the street has paid for the car," the officer wrote.

People who live in Seattle say Hudson's car is more than just a nuisance.
“If he’s driving 107 miles an hour in downtown, that is putting peoples’ lives at risk. What are we waiting for? For him to kill someone?" said Chris Allen, who lives near Hudson's apartment on 2nd Ave in downtown Seattle. “I have actually woken up in the middle of night thinking it’s gunshots, but it’s just Miles Hudson going by in his Charger.”

Allen said he and other neighbors have reached out to Meta to ask why Hudson is allowed to make money off the videos on his account.
"But it’s still up and running, he’s still making money off this. He’s affecting thousands of people down here," Allen told KOMO News.

Hudson is scheduled to appear again in court for his reckless driving charges on June 12, and a hearing was set for the lawsuit on June 18.
Honestly it's not so much the noise I care about, that's what you get for living downtown, it's the 100+ mph speeding. That shit is going to get some innocent people killed, like the asshole in Renton doing 110 mph on an arterial who slammed into a van carrying homeschool kids (don't look that story up unless you want your day wrecked).

Also, there is a website with full dox and lots of archives of Miles Hudson's activities and legal entanglements. https://belltownhellcat.simple.ink/ (Archive)
 
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You know, listening to car guys, you'd think the gummamint, the EPA, and all of the other alphabets made it where you couldn't even look at your car funny without a swat team knocking down your door, and now I'm being told a nigger can do whatever he wants to his car and the police have to talk to him like a soyjak redditor?
Here’s your answer
 
This plot for a Sleepless In Seattle sequel sounds like it's got nothing to do with first movie
Damn it. I was just about to make a joke about woke remakes making the characters black

IMG_5584-576765.jpg
 
Apparently Hudson has a previous conviction for assaulting his mother and received a suspended sentence for it. He might go to jail for violating the terms of that suspended sentence.

'Belltown Hellcat' could face jail time for violating court agreement​

(Article) (Archive)

SEATTLE - Miles Hudson, infamously known as the "Belltown Hellcat" owner, might be headed to jail, according to a legal expert who says Hudson has violated his court agreement.

FOX 13 Seattle previously reported that Hudson has a criminal history of violence, and now we’re learning that his record could put the brakes on his notorious activities.

Hudson was sentenced to about a year in jail for his assault conviction against his mother. However, nearly the entire punishment was suspended as long as he stayed out of trouble, which, according to the Seattle City Attorney, he has not.

"He previously pled guilty to an assault. All the jail time was suspended. That’s a good deal if you can’t stay out of trouble for a couple of years," said Mark Lindquist, a legal expert and former Pierce County prosecuting attorney.

Hudson admitted to the courts that he beat up his mother in 2022. Reports indicate he became angry when she wouldn’t make him coffee, grabbed the back of the chair she was sitting in, and slammed her to the ground. Court records show the judge sentenced Hudson to about a year in jail, but he only served two days thanks to a suspended sentence.

Lindquist says with all the new attention on the "Belltown Hellcat," that reduced sentence could be revoked.

"When judges cut you a break, and a suspended sentence is definitely a break, they expect you to stay out of trouble. When you don’t, they’re likely going to want to send a message," said Lindquist.

Despite facing two reckless driving charges and over $80,000 in fines, "Belltown Hellcat" driver Miles Hudson is still on the streets and posting new content in his 2023 Dodge Charger.

According to the conditions of Hudson’s suspended sentence in Renton, he explicitly could not break the law, which the Seattle City Attorney accuses him of doing.

He faces two reckless driving charges in the city, as well as tens of thousands of dollars in civil fines.

"The judge could find he has violated his conditions of release before he is convicted of the new charges," Lindquist noted.

The original assault conviction is from Renton, and they’d be the ones to decide if Hudson goes to jail. However, an official with the city said they can’t comment on the case.

Lindquist tells FOX 13 Seattle that Hudson likely faces at least some time behind bars. "The judge is likely going to look at how serious the new violation is, and what kind of life the guy has been leading since the previous charges … has he cleaned up his act or not?"

Adding to his legal troubles and lawsuits, FOX 13 Seattle uncovered another criminal case against Hudson for cyber harassment; it's currently under review. An official with the attorney’s office confirmed no charges have been filed yet.
 

Seattle’s ‘Belltown Hellcat’ Is Arrested and Barred From Instagram​


After months of roaring around the city in a souped-up Dodge Charger, drawing furious complaints and unpaid fines, Miles Hudson was led out of court on Monday in handcuffs.

A man who for months has infuriated Seattle residents with his raucous driving and late-night social media escapades was ordered into custody on Monday and prohibited from posting to his vast following on Instagram.

Miles Hudson, 21, known in Seattle as the “Belltown Hellcat,” has faced a series of escalating legal troubles after spending many nights roaring through downtown streets, the explosive backfires from his Dodge Charger Hellcat SRT shaking windows and rattling nerves. Separately, a woman accused him of stalking her and sending explicit images of her to other people.

At a hearing on Monday where Mr. Hudson appeared wearing a facial covering, Magistrate Judge Seth Niesen ordered him taken into custody, setting bail at $5,000 for the domestic stalking case and $2,500 for the reckless driving case.
He also barred Mr. Hudson from posting on his Twitch and Instagram accounts.

“If there are any posts from those accounts, it’s a violation of this court’s order,” the judge said, before a court marshal placed handcuffs on Mr. Hudson and led him out of the courtroom.

Mr. Hudson has built a following of more than 750,000 on Instagram. Many of his videos show him driving Seattle’s streets at nights, the car revving and backfiring. At least one video shows Mr. Hudson exceeding 100 miles per hour on downtown streets. Residents have repeatedly complained, saying the noise, which often sounds like gun shots, is keeping them awake at night.

City officials at first responded with citations, fines and a lawsuit.

But Mr. Hudson seemed to relish his growing notoriety. In a video interview posted in recent days, he says that those bothered by the noise should consider relocating to higher units. And he has an answer for people who complain that his vehicle is waking their pets or children.

“I genuinely don’t care,” he says.

During a traffic stop this year, a police officer pleaded with Mr. Hudson to take his vehicle to a racetrack. Mr. Hudson protested, saying that his street driving had earned him a large Instagram following. “I’ve turned it into a career,” he told the officer, according to a video released by the city.

The city persisted and, in response to the rising legal pressure, Mr. Hudson said he was working to modify his vehicle. Some recent videos show other people at the wheel of the Hellcat.

In the meantime, his other legal troubles began resurfacing, including charges in two domestic cases. In one of them, he was accused of assaulting his mother in the suburb of Renton. His jail sentence in those cases was suspended, but the court is now revisiting it amid his other legal troubles.

The stalking case filed last month came after Mr. Hudson’s ex-girlfriend reported being harassed by him; she says that Mr. Hudson showed up at her workplace and left constant messages. She also filed a complaint alleging that he had sent explicit video of her to an ex-boyfriend.

That case is still pending, but on Monday the judge directed that Mr. Hudson be taken into custody, at least until he could post bail. He also ordered him not to contact the woman or go within 1,000 feet of her home or workplace.

Mr. Hudson entered a plea of not guilty on Monday in the stalking case. His lawyer could not be reached for comment.

 
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