Hundreds of discarded tires scattered across the northern end of Palm Beach County have landed a Palm City man in jail, after investigators say they tied a weeks-long dumping spree to a single rental truck. Environmental Unit detectives linked 13 separate illegal dumping incidents to one vehicle between Dec. 21, 2025 and Jan. 23, 2026, with most drops involving 50 or more tires at a time. The arrest is putting fresh attention on a recurring problem that local crews say drains both time and money to clean up.
According to a post by PBSO, detectives identified the suspect vehicle as a U‑Haul box truck with Arizona plates, then used a rental agreement to trace it back to 49‑year‑old Jason Guidetti of Palm City. PBSO says Guidetti was arrested on six felony counts and six misdemeanor counts related to the illegal dumping and is being held at the Palm Beach County jail while he awaits his next court appearance. The agency did not immediately release a court date or offer further comment beyond the brief arrest announcement.
The county’s Solid Waste Authority of Palm Beach County notes that residents can bring tires to the county landfill, but transfer stations will not take them. State rules also require anyone hauling more than 25 tires at once to register with the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. By those standards, many of the drops PBSO described would count as regulated commercial loads that are supposed to come with permits and recordkeeping, as outlined in the Florida handbook on solid and hazardous waste.
How detectives say they connected the dumps
Investigators in PBSO’s Environmental Unit reviewed patterns across the northern end of Palm Beach County and compared surveillance footage and license plate details from multiple scenes. They concluded the same box truck kept turning up, then used the rental paperwork tied to that truck to identify the renter, PBSO said. That chain of evidence across 13 incidents is what detectives say led to Guidetti’s arrest.
Local cleanup costs and public health risk
Those tire piles are not just ugly. Large stacks collect standing water that can turn into mosquito breeding grounds and are known to present serious fire and pollution risks. Environmental agencies and reviews warn that tire stockpiles are difficult and expensive to extinguish once they catch fire and can leach harmful compounds into soil and water, which raises public health concerns and cleanup costs. Local enforcement efforts have been increasing in recent years, and a West Palm Beach clean-streets task force cleared more than 255,000 pounds of waste and made multiple arrests as part of a broader push to discourage illegal dumping…