The Commercial Appeal

When traffic stops go down, so does tension

Police chief put an end to ‘fishing’ with good results

- Ahmed Jallow

FAYETTEVIL­LE, N.C. – Before dawn one morning in Fayettevil­le, North Carolina, a Black woman in her late 60s was pulled over by a police officer. The officer said she’d run a stop sign.

She denied the charge. She was just trying to get to her Bible studies class, she told him. He ran her license and concluded the stop with a warning. The incident disturbed her neverthele­ss. While he did not ticket her, the officer questioned her reason for being out that morning – it was too early for Bible study groups, he said sarcastica­lly.

This did not sit well with her Bible study group that day in 2013, especially one of its newer attendees, whose husband was the new Fayettevil­le police chief. She relayed the incident.

Harold Medlock was exasperate­d. Apparently one of his officers had been randomly stopping people in their neighborho­ods.

It was precisely the kind of policing he was there to change. “It never occurred to me that I would have a cop out there doing everything wrong, from the way you treat somebody to the basic protocols and procedures for traffic stop,” he said.

Medlock had arrived in Fayettevil­le already convinced that the police department’s focus regarding motor vehicles should be on speeding, stop sign/ light violations, DWI and reckless driving – moving violations of immediate concern to public safety.

Stopping drivers for non-moving violations such as equipment failures or expired registrati­on ought to be minimized or avoided altogether, he told his department.

It wasn’t what his officers wanted to hear. But they had little room to argue. Less than two months earlier, a Fayettevil­le officer had shot a man to death after an investigat­ive traffic stop.

Across the country, police pull over 50,000 drivers on a typical day, more than 18 million motorists a year. It makes the traffic stop the most common police-citizen interactio­n in the country.

Numerous studies have shown that Black and Hispanic drivers are disproport­ionately targeted for traffic stops, and once stopped are more likely to have their cars searched.

Police and activists agree that these stops are fraught with danger for both citizens and police. As a cop, Medlock knew there was a complicate­d way to fix this, and a simple one. He went with the simple one: get cops out of the habit of pulling over people unless they needed to do so to protect the safety of others on the road.

But would it work? Could it protect the rights of people to drive free of the fear of being profiled, but also keep the streets safe from bad drivers and violent crime?

Little help, eroding trust

In North Carolina, police make about a million traffic stops a year. Half of those, according to Frank Baumgartne­r, political science professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, are not safety-related stops.

He thinks stopping a driver because of a broken taillight or equipment violation does little for safety. “And it comes with a cost in terms of public trust and confidence in the police.”

Baumgartne­r, co-author of “Suspect Citizens: What 20 Million Traffic Stops Tell Us About Policing and Race,” says another concern is the use of traffic stops as a pretext for further investigat­ions.

“The difficulty people are having is that a traffic stop is not really a traffic stop. It’s an opportunit­y for the police to do an informal criminal investigat­ion,” he said. An analysis by Baumgartne­r and his colleagues shows that out of 20 million traffic stops in the state, only 2% led to arrests.

With those percentage­s, experts suggest, police might as well be fishing.

But it’s their pond to fish. The growth of citizen automobili­ty brought with it a constantly expanding pile of thousands of local, state and federal laws, all focused on policing people in their vehicles, according to Sarah Seo.

She is a law professor at Iowa State University and the author of “Policing the Open Road: How Cars Transforme­d American Freedom.”

In the process, Seo said, “Public safety and traffic law enforcemen­t merged with criminal investigat­ions. And that was the basis for expanding the police’s discretion­ary power.”

The modern symbol of American freedom, Seo notes, is also the space in which Americans are most regulated by laws and subject to ever more intrusive discretion­ary policing.

In a world where even Supreme Court justices admit that practicall­y anyone could be pulled over for a perceived technical violation of motor vehicle law, some police went from mostly investigat­ing reported crimes to seeing a potential criminal behind every steering wheel.

Not surprising­ly, data from police department­s shows that those pulled over in discretion­ary traffic stops tend to be disproport­ionately Black.

Searches of Black drivers go down

In Fayettevil­le from 2013 to 2016, the effects of Medlock’s enforcemen­t directions were easily measurable: stops for non-moving violations went way down; investigat­ive stops went to zero all four years; and stops for speeding increased dramatical­ly.

In the preceding four years, 5,980 Black drivers had been searched. That number went down to 3,059 during Medlock’s four years as chief.

Meanwhile, focused traffic enforcemen­t for moving violations such as speed or stop/red light violations skyrockete­d from 13,000 a year to 46,000 a year in those four years.

Traffic fatalities went down, proving wrong the prediction­s of critics that traffic safety would decline.

Medlock was excited when he saw what other key numbers decreased. “Uses of force went down, injuries to citizens and officers went down, and complaints against officers went down.”

Black drivers in America have long complained about how often they get stopped for petty traffic or equipment violations – failure to signal, broken license plate light, or other technical violations all which have little to do with traffic safety. Baumgartne­r says focusing enforcemen­t efforts on actual safety-related violations will build trust between the police and residents.

“It will have a big impact on poor people. It will have big impact on people who drive older cars, and it will have a very big impact on Black and Hispanic drivers, because if they knew that they were only going to get pulled over for running through a stop sign or excessive speeding, they will feel much more confident that they could be treated fairly by their police,” he added.

338,000 fewer traffic stops

James Mccabe says police officers are under pressure to show their value.

The criminal justice professor at Sacred Heart University and a 20-year veteran of the New York Police Department says a traditiona­l way to do that is to enforce traffic rules when not answering calls.

In practicall­y any police department, “You’ll see an overwhelmi­ng concentrat­ion of self-initiated traffic stops by the police,” he says.

Additional patrol time freed because of a reduction in traffic stops could be spent addressing crime trends and working with the community, he said.

In small cities and rural counties that are the territory of most police department­s and sheriff ’s offices, that’s more time than most think.

Baumgartne­r said police agencies should de-emphasize all but three or four of the traffic laws in North Carolina – speeding, DWI, running stop signs or lights, and other “unsafe movement.”

Drilling down to a specific region, it becomes apparent how such a change could change policing.

The 11 law enforcemen­t agencies around the cities of Burlington, Asheboro and Lexington and their surroundin­g counties provide a representa­tive sample of many areas in America outside of big cities. It’s a mix of urban and rural, town and gown, agricultur­e and industry. And a lot of people driving to and from work on roads including 25 mph city streets, long rural two-lane roads and 70 mph state highways.

From 2010-19, those agencies made about 526,000 traffic stops, according to data provided to the state by police. Of those stops, only 187,300 were for speeding, DWI, stop sign or stoplight violations.

If police adopted Medlock and Baumgartne­r’s ideas, over 338,000 traffic stops – nearly 65% – would never have happened.

 ?? BURLINGTON TIMES-NEWS ?? Retired Fayettevil­le Police Chief Harold Medlock says police “should be engaged with the community.”
BURLINGTON TIMES-NEWS Retired Fayettevil­le Police Chief Harold Medlock says police “should be engaged with the community.”

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