The Demand for Money Behind Many Police Traffic Stops
1st November 2021
Harold Brown’s contribution to the local treasury began as so many others have in Valley Brook, Okla.: A police officer saw that the light above his license plate was out.
“You pulled me over for that? Come on, man,” said Mr. Brown, a security guard headed home from work at 1:30 a.m. Expressing his annoyance was all it took. The officer yelled at Mr. Brown, ordered him out of the car and threw him to the pavement.
After a trip to jail that night in 2018, hands cuffed and blood running down his face onto his uniform, Mr. Brown eventually arrived at the crux of the matter: Valley Brook wanted $800 in fines and fees. It was a fraction of the roughly $1 million that the town of about 870 people collects each year from traffic cases.
What’s the use of power if you can’t abuse it?
November 2nd, 2021 at 00:59
Same reason that every intersection suddenly had red-light cameras installed. Revenue. Thankfully, enough people realized that it was a scam and banned it by law in Texas.