Retired Long Island Grandma Battles Hundreds Of Fines And Traffic Violations Over Having ‘Star Trek’ License Plate
Who needs enemies when your license plate is out to get you?
Jesse
- Published in News
When life hands you lemons, you make lemonade. But when life hands you a license plate that’s a dead ringer for the USS Enterprise from Star Trek, you get a mailbox overflowing with parking tickets. That’s exactly what happened to Breda Koorey, a Long Island grandma who unknowingly became the victim of a bizarre parking fine saga.
While her innocent license plate, “NCC-1701,” might have delighted Trekkies, the 76-year-old's connection to the Star Trek universe turned out to be a bureaucratic nightmare—more of a curse and less of a cosmic adventure.
The trouble began when replicas of Koorey’s license plate started popping up online, available for as little as $20 on sites like Amazon and eBay. What was supposed to be a harmless collectible for Star Trek fans turned out to be an invitation for troublemakers.
They’d purchase the plates online, slap them on their cars, and rack up fines—all of which were directly to Koorey’s address. Some even went as far as committing crimes, and poor Koorey became the unwitting recipient of the backlash; the license plate was officially registered in her name, after all.
From Ohio to Canada, Koorey found herself drowning in tickets she didn’t deserve. It was the ultimate collision of fandom and fraud, and she was caught in the crossfire. Let’s break down how Koorey’s brush with Star Trek infamy turned into a legal saga worthy of its own TV drama.
Her only crime was having every Sci-Fi enthusiast’s dream license plate—now the fines won’t stop pouring in!
Koorey’s ordeal began years ago, but it didn’t end when she stopped driving. Despite selling her car and surrendering her license plate, tickets kept piling up.
The rules around license plates vary by state—some require just one at the rear, while others demand plates on both the front and back.
Replica Star Trek plates were being used illegally by fans or scammers to bypass fines and commit crimes. Some buyers may not have realized the implications, but others clearly knew they were exploiting a loophole.
“I want to cry because it’s a simple matter that they could have fixed,” Koorey told Live 5 News, reflecting on the endless wave of fines that kept arriving at her doorstep.
Overwhelmed and frustrated, she sought legal help from attorney Kenneth Mollins, who discovered the root of the issue: Koorey’s name and address were never removed from the Department of Motor Vehicles’ system despite surrendering her plate.
The legendary NCC-1701: Iconic in space, but causing chaos on Earth for one unsuspecting victim.
CBS New YorkNew York officials have wiped out 194 bogus tickets tied to the infamous “NCC-1701” plate, but the battle is far from over. Koorey’s attorney still has hundreds more to tackle.
The fines weren’t just local, either. Koorey received summonses from 23 states, as well as Canada, demanding payment for violations she didn’t commit.
A ‘Star Trek’ license plate turns 76-year-old Breda Koorey into an unintended ticket magnet
CBS via Getty ImagesNow I’m going to make a hole in the yard and bury these documents, these hundreds of tickets,” Koorey quipped, summing up her frustration.
While her legal battle continues, Koorey’s story is a cautionary tale about how a seemingly harmless novelty item can spiral into a galaxy of chaos. For Star Trek fans, “NCC-1701” may be iconic, but for Breda Koorey, it’s the number she’d rather leave in another dimension.