Opinion Three Black leaders offer one practical solution to reduce police assaults on Black motorists - Broken Taillights and Tinted Windows are not the same thing as a Missing License Plate

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The Department of Justice announced last week that it will review the use of force by the Memphis Police Department. It also plans to examine the operations of specialized police units such as the one responsible for killing Tyre Nichols.

The decision by federal authorities to launch a probe into the events that led to Nichols’ killing is welcome news. We can’t afford to wait for the investigation’s results, however, to fix a problem that endangers Black lives every day: needless traffic stops.


As three Black men, we know firsthand the worry of whether the everyday act of driving will end in tragedy for ourselves, our brothers and sisters, or nieces and nephews and children — just as it did for Nichols. And as leaders of three of the nation’s largest organizations committed to criminal and racial justice, we understand that there are concrete steps we can take to enact policies that make traffic stops safer for our families and for all Black Americans.


Statistics show just how dangerous driving while Black can be: Traffic stops are one of the most common ways police encounter the public. Police make 20 million stops each year, according to research. Black motorists are less likely than White drivers to possess illegal items such as drugs or weapons, but they are stopped more often, and after a traffic stop they are more likely to be searched.

Of the more than 1,000 people killed by police each year, 10% involved traffic stops. The most common stated reasons for a traffic stop? One study found that nearly half were for minor issues such as a broken taillight, a defective or missing license plate or tinted windows. Why is this the work of armed police officers?

Don’t be fooled into thinking that those 20 million stops are at all necessary, targeted efforts to deliver safety. Traffic stops are a major moneymaker, and Black people know this. Some towns and cities generate at least 10% of their annual budgets from traffic stop revenue.

Traffic stops are poor tools for fighting crime and make the roadways markedly less safe for Black drivers. Black people in this country and law enforcement come into contact entirely too often; changing the way traffic stops happen in this nation is foundational to any discussion about police reform.

States and localities have an important role to play by passing laws and ordinances to end or at least limit the use of traffic stops for low-level issues that do not affect safety — such as a broken taillight or tinted windows.


Following Nichols’ death, the Memphis City Council acquiesced to public demands and took a step in the right direction by considering an ordinance that will redirect police away from low-level traffic stops. But no city or state should wait until a tragedy occurs or they’re under the scrutiny of media attention before acting.

Some states have adopted or are considering similar policies, including Virginia, Oregon and Washington, as well as the cities of Philadelphia and Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

Meanwhile, prosecutors in Minnesota, Michigan and Vermont have found law enforcement practices resulting from traffic stops so gratuitously harmful that they have refused to charge cases that emerge from them.

Traffic stops have proven to be deadly from coast to coast, but waiting for municipalities to solve the problem means that Black Americans living in these cities and states could be vulnerable any time they decide to travel. Immediate action is needed, and the Biden administration must take the lead.


The US Department of Transportation sends hundreds of millions of dollars each year in highway safety funding to states on the condition that localities engage in traffic enforcement. By reforming traffic stops, federal, state and local leaders can save countless lives.

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg should instruct his department to disburse safety grants to localities that limit low-level traffic stops and rely on traffic enforcement methods other than police, including civilian traffic professionals who can address road safety issues without the intimidation — and possible danger — of a badge and a gun.

States and cities can also eliminate the basis for millions of traffic stops in the first place by offering vouchers for free repairs and services to motorists to fix broken taillights, replace a defective or missing license plate, or renew a lapsed registration. Several counties and cities have launched these kinds of programs, including Long Island’s Suffolk County, New York and Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

None of these reforms require more policing, or more funding for police. They would all increase safety in Black communities that are overpoliced yet underserved. Police funding can go toward investigating and resolving real crimes, rather than undermining the legitimacy of law enforcement in our communities.

We, as a society, must stop incentivizing police departments to conduct traffic enforcement on what amounts to low-level offenses. We must not wait until the next tragedy to take action on these concrete steps forward. That is the best way to honor Tyre Nichols and countless others who have been surveilled, harassed and too often killed while doing something as simple as driving while Black.
 
My car has something wrong with the electrical harness that causes it to periodically burn out one of my taillights. I find out that another light has gone out generally when I get pulled over by a cop. Is it annoying? Yes. Do I chimp out at the police officer over it? No. I give him my license, registration and insurance, nod my head when he tells me I need to fix it, and then I go buy a few more packs of lightbulbs from the car parts store. I get stopped on average I'd say 8 times a year for this. My car is a beater shitbox from 2004, I don't look rich or anything. I just know that cops have a license to kill me if I chimp out over bullshit, so I'm polite, tell them I'll fix it, and go on with my day. I've never even gotten a ticket for it. I keep one of the packages in the car to show officers in case I get the same one more than once, to show that I've at least tried to follow the law. It's not hard to interact with the cops at traffic stops and live.
 
Yet another scholarly take on the classic "wanna live in one'em pear lel societies, wanna enjoy em wypipo benefits, ignore em wypipo laws, sponsabiltees an social niceties".

If cops are the problem. they should make an example of the cops that beat the tyre guy, execute them all on live tv, many wanted to with chauvin, don't fuck this one up?
 
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"Blacks are impulsive, lazy creatures who can't be expected to abide by the same laws that the rest of civilized society obeys unless forced to at gunpoint."

"Holy shit that's racist!"

"No actually, that's what blacks themselves are saying."
 
Who the hell does that include? Social workers? Chimps will pull a gun on you to get out of a ticket.

The political right needs to be more enthusiastic about putting shitlib dangerhairs directly in the middle of the hellish world their policies produce. So, yes, I think we should send social workers, school teachers, and state human resources employees to handle minor traffic incidents in the ghetto.
 
Yet another scholarly take on the classic "wanna live in one'em pear lel societies, wanna enjoy em wypipo benefits, ignore em wypipo laws, sponsabiltees an social niceties".

If cops are the problem. they should make an example of the cops that beat the tyre guy, execute them all on live tv, many wanted to with chauvin, don't fuck this one up?
The system is the problem and Cops are a huge factor in the problem,. Another factor is also their supporters. Too many bootlickers who love police brutality on black people, but cannot stop crying the moment it happens to them or their family. You can follow the law, you can never break the rules, but if a cop or DA decides that they need a bitch for a moment or they want a "slam dunk" and you're in their sights? There's nothing you can do.

Every other week, there's another black person exonerated for a crime they clearly didn't commit but the DA and the judge just had hate boners for niggers that day. A man was just released from a 400 year sentence for armed robbery (the DA wanted 800 years) , despite having video evidence that he wasn't there, but because he had a prior charge, he MUST be the right guy. They put away a guy for 30 years while the actual criminal continued being a criminal.

Do we have to discuss the white and black people who complied peacefully and still got shot by the police? Or the ex-military faggots who can't beat their wives but can't wait to beat on blacks? Or the complete cowards like the Ulvade cops who can talk the talk, wear military gear, but heaven forbid they actually have to do their jobs and protect, they cower outside? Or the cucked cops who let Antifa run all over Atlanta?

Side note: That Atlanta thing was is fucking hilarious. They were expecting black people, but got nothing but white people ,asians and hispanics fucking their shit - a grand total of 3 brown people and their approach of "being soft" is seen as being complete pussies towards Antifa.


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Crime: Being a caretaker for an autistic adult while black.
Secondary Crime: Completely complying with the officers demands.
Sentence: Death.
Sentence Status: Carried out but target did not die.

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Crime: Playing with a pellet gun and complying.
Secondary Crime: Failing to play police command twister, given conflicting commands from two different officers.
Sentence: Death.


Crime: Being in your own home.
Secondary Crime: Being black.
Third Crime: Making a police officer afraid, despite not facing her.
Sentence: Death
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