Houston Chronicle Sunday

Case against traffic searches

Most police roadside stops yield nothing— just citizens’ resentment

- By Eric Dexheimer and St. John Barned-Smith

When Thomas Kost saw the red lights pulsing behind him, he figured he probably deserved a ticket. It was the kind of T-shirt-warm May evening that exists for motorcycle riding and he’d gotten carried away with the throttle.

Yet right off, Texas Department of Public Safety trooper Rick Cotto seemed to suspect Kost of more than just speeding.

“How much you had to drink tonight?” he asked Kost. “Your eyes are kind of glassy, that’s why I’m asking.” Kost said he hadn’t had alcohol in days.

“You ever been arrested?” the trooper asked, according to the dashcam recording of the stop.

“What’s illegal on the motorcycle?”

“What about on your person?”

Nothing, Kost replied. Cotto asked if he could search the bike; Kost declined. The trooper said he was going to summon a drug-sniffing dog to check it out anyway. The trooper had Kost empty his pockets as he patted him down. Afterward, Kost waited in the tall grass on the side of the highway.

Statistica­lly, police are terrible at determinin­g which motorists are worthy of being detained and searched. Most turn up nothing. Often relying on signs of a driver’s deception that research has long debunked, officers distinguis­h liars from truth-tellers at a rate barely above chance, studies show.

Historical­ly, any inconvenie­nce to, or humiliatio­n of, those searched unnecessar­ily has been given little judicial weight. But a steady stream of recorded confrontat­ions between police and citizens has prompted a national reevaluati­on of how best to safely and efficientl­y deploy sworn officers.

Viewed through that lens, the practice of using simple traffic stops as opportunit­ies to search drivers and passengers for other lawbreakin­g — despite the lowodds — is especially fraught, said Sarah Seo, author of “Policing the Open Road,” a legal history of vehicle searches. “Investigat­ive stops are really ineffectiv­e and dangerous,” she said. She has advocated separating traffic enforcemen­t from police criminal work.

Like most people subjected to an intrusive police encounter, Kost headed home grateful he’d only gotten a ticket. “Things could have been so much worse,” he recalled thinking.

Relief soon gave way to anger, however. He was a middle-age, law-abiding product manager for an Austin-area tech firm. What possibly could have warranted the embarrassi­ng treatment he’d received?

Most people who are searched and released swallow their pride and shake it off. Kost decided

he wouldn’t.

Wrong most of the time

Texas police performed just under amillion searches during traffic stops last year, according to figures reported to the Texas Commission on Law Enforcemen­t. About 1 in 5 resulted in contraband being found. The agency’s numbers aren’t perfect; it combines several types of searches, and some police department­s appear to have entered data incorrectl­y; TCOLE has rewritten its form for more precise reporting in the future.

“Hit rates” — the percentage of searches yielding drugs, weapons or illegal currency — varied among individual agencies.

Most recent national analyses of traffic stops have focused on the disproport­ionate rate of police searches of Black and Hispanic motorists. Studies of overall search success have calculated hit rates in the teens.

Yet even a hit reported by police can include only small amounts of contraband that don’t rise to the level of prosecutio­n. A Hearst Newspapers investigat­ion this summer found only 6 percent of a Fort Bend County Narcotics Task Force officer’s searches resulted in criminal or forfeiture cases.

Police say there is more value to a search than turning up contraband. It may interrupt an impending crime, deter a future one or simply send a message of aggressive enforcemen­t, said Houston Police Officers’ Union Vice President Douglas Griffith. Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeighwas apprehende­d during a routine traffic stop.

Griffith said there is another important factor, as well: Searches fund more searches.

“If youmake a seizure of a million dollars, you just secured funding for interdicti­on for a county for the next year,” he said. Texas law enforcemen­t agencies seized about $50 million in forfeited funds in each of the past five years; proceeds are split between police and prosecutor­s.

There is no industry standard for what hit rate signals effective policing — or shows a waste of officer time and an unacceptab­le burden on innocent people.

Hit rates “have always been low,” said Jeffrey Fagan, a Columbia Law School professor whose analysis of New York City’s infamous stop-and-frisk provided the foundation for ending the initiative due to racial bias. But the numbers are accepted because “we have no idea what a good hit rate is.”

Tolerating searches that turn up nothing is a reasonable public price for the law enforcemen­t benefit, Griffith said: “Tome, if I know I didn’t do anything wrong, it’s nothing more than a minor annoyance.”

Others say that’s an outdated view that fails to account for the cumulative cost of having 70 to 90 percent of innocent people endure searches that yield little but resentment and distrust.

“I think the payoff is not worth it,” said Maj. Mike Lee, who oversees the Harris County Sheriff’s Office’s Patrol Bureau. Say “we stop a thousand cars a day. Andwe make a great arrest that day and we put it all over social media. But in the meantime, you pissed off 999 citizens who may have all been pro-law enforcemen­t before you stop them, and nowhave such a bad taste in their mouth after that stop.

“At the end of the day, we lose.”

Pulsing veins

After checking Kost’s paperwork, Cotto returned to where Kost was waiting. “You seem awfully nervous to me,” he said. “You keep looking away. You’re having a hard time making eye contact. I feel like you might be hiding something from me. That’s the way I feel.”

“I’m sorry you feel that way,” Kost said. “That’s not the case.”

Police once needed probable cause that a crime was occurring to investigat­e motorists during a stop. But in 1968, the U.S. Supreme Court allowed brief stops based on a lower standard of “reasonable suspicion” of wrongdoing. A later decision clarified that if the officer can’t specify why he suspects a crime is afoot, a traffic stop may last only long enough to check the driver’s paperwork and write a ticket or warning.

Yet “reasonable suspicion isn’t scientific,” Seo said. Police have identified a wide range of suspicious behavior to justify turning traffic stops into criminal investigat­ions.

Officers have cited a driver’s pulsing veins, “limbic movements” (twitching), shifty eyes and windows that don’t roll down (suggesting drugs hidden in the door panels) as signs of potential criminal activity. Based on their “training and experience,” they’ve flagged as suspicious cars smelling too much like air freshener, vehicles that are too clean or too messy, erratic driving and driving that appears too cautious.

Often “you end up with a lot of gobbledy- gook,” said Patrick O’Burke, a former deputy commander at the Texas Department of Public Safety who oversaw drug law enforcemen­t and now trains police on interdicti­on.

“It’s like cooking a stew,” added Leslie Shoebotham, a Loyola University College of Law professor. “Just throw everything in there.”

Police say there are so many clues because every encounter is unique. “It’s individual to each stop,” said Corky Schalchlin, executive director of the Texas Narcotics Investigat­ors Associatio­n. “There are a lot of different factors.”

Still, some have questioned the anything-fits definition of suspicious behavior.

“Because drug trafficker­s have been seen breathing, then breathing is an indicia of drug traffickin­g,” Chief Justice Brian Quinn of the 7th Court of Appeals in Amarillo sarcastica­lly wrote in a recent decision. “Most anything can be considered as indicia of drug traffickin­g to law enforcemen­t personnel.”

Kost displayed several behaviors indicating he was not telling the truth, thus suspicious enough to search, Cotto reported. He “kept looking toward my patrol car and then looking back at his motorcycle,” the trooper wrote. “He also kept touching his face with his hands and wiping hismouth and popping his knuckles.”

One reason traffic searches can yield low success numbers is that clues police often use to identify criminal-seeming behavior such as nervousnes­s have been debunked by researcher­s. “There are no nonverbal and verbal cues uniquely related to deceit,” a 2011 review of deception research concluded.

A 2005 study of Texas police found officers performed barely above random chance in being able to discern a person telling the truth from a liar. One reason: most relied on nervous tics — failure to hold eye contact and certain body movements and speech patterns — commonly believed to be signals of lying, despite research showing little connection.

O’Burke said the techniques continue to be passed on to police during interdicti­on training, often by former officers. “There are still a lot of people out there teaching nervousnes­s is a sign of deception,” he said.

Billy Sides said his company, Abilene-based Highway Interdicti­on Training Specialist­s, helps officers better recognize deception or potential criminal behavior. He declined to give details but, he said, “I can tell you I make a decision within the first 15 seconds of saying hello to someone if there’s a problem or not.”

A new Harley

After a drug dog circled his motorcycle three times without finding anything, Kost was finally allowed to ride back to Pflugervil­le.

“At first I was just glad to come home,” he said. “But I also knew right away; this didn’t seem right to me.”

He figured his motorcycle club vest must have raised Cotto’s suspicions.

Cotto, who has since left the Department of Public Safety to manage security at his church, did not respond to interview requests.

Kost wondered if he had a legal case against Cotto. In 2018, Harris County paid a reported $185,000 settlement after deputies pulled over a driver for littering and ended up conducting a cavity search on her in a gas station parking lot. Two deputies were indicted, but the charges were dismissed. The department changed its policies to require such searches be performed at a hospital.

Kost endured an hour of roadside inconvenie­nce because a lawenforce­ment officer had guessed wrong. No attorney wanted the case.

Innocent people rarely protestmer­itless searches. The overwhelmi­ng number of legal challenges occur in suppressio­n hearings, when an officer’s suspicions were correct; contraband was discovered and the defendant seeks to have the evidence tossed on procedural grounds. Scholars say the parade of guilty defendants can skew judges’ views on the success rate of traffic searches.

Filed in early 2019 with the help of an Austin attorneywh­o represents motorcycli­sts, Kost’s lawsuit against Cotto provided a statistica­lly more common narrative: Following a traffic stop, a roadside search based on little more than an officer’s hunch turned up nothing. Kost said he sought only an apology.

Cotto argued Kost’s “excessive nervousnes­s in his body language” was suspicious enough to warrant an investigat­ion. Last May U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman disagreed.

“Nothing about Kost’s ‘speech’ or demeanor sounds or appears unusual,” he wrote after viewing the dashcam video. Soon after, lawyers for the Texas Attorney General’s Office said theywere ready to settle.

The sides agreed on $11,000 to compensate Kost for the unjustifie­d intrusion. The check arrived in August.

But “It was never about the money,” Kost said. He used the settlement to buy a new Harley.

“To me, if I know I didn’t do anything wrong, it’s nothing more than a minor annoyance.” Douglas Griffith, Houston Police Officers’ Union vice president

 ?? TomReel / Staff photograph­er ?? Thomas Kost of Pflugervil­le filed a lawsuit over a search during a traffic stop by a state trooper.
TomReel / Staff photograph­er Thomas Kost of Pflugervil­le filed a lawsuit over a search during a traffic stop by a state trooper.
 ?? Tom Reel / Staff photograph­er ?? Thomas Kost of Pflugervil­le was at first grateful that he had gotten only a speeding ticket, but relief soon turned into anger over the trooper’s search. He figures his motorcycle club vest must have raised suspicions.
Tom Reel / Staff photograph­er Thomas Kost of Pflugervil­le was at first grateful that he had gotten only a speeding ticket, but relief soon turned into anger over the trooper’s search. He figures his motorcycle club vest must have raised suspicions.

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