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Here Are Your Worst Traffic Stop Stories

Here Are Your Worst Traffic Stop Stories

The long arm of the law has grazed or forcefully bumped into most of us who spend a lot of time on the road.

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Photo: Mark Felix (Getty Images)

We asked readers to share stories of their worst traffic encounters with police. They obliged with detailed and thorough sagas of run-ins with highway patrol and city police departments, with the running theme being just how vindictive law enforcement officers can be. But these traffic stops didn’t seem to go too far past verbal hostility and aggression towards readers, luckily.

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My own run-ins with police are quite limited despite how ostentatious my red BMW is. Then again, the 318ti is quite slow. The New York Times reports that high-speed chases are on the rise on the border, which reportedly traces to a higher number of State Troopers who’re willing to put people at risk lest a law-breaking motorist get away.

I’ll continue to steer clear of the fuzz by not giving them reason to stop me — other than a broken tail light, I guess — and so should all of you. Just read these accounts if you need some encouragement:

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2 / 17

The “Fix-It” Ticket

The “Fix-It” Ticket

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Photo: Bridget Bennett (Getty Images)

I’m a middle age upper-middle class white guy who looks the part, and while I’ve been pulled over I think 7 times in my life, none have been bad. Go figure.

However, about 3 years ago I left my office at about 11:30 PM. There was a cop sitting in the next parking lot over, who I saw. I stopped at the light, proceeded on green, and he lit me up. He pulled me over for a fog light that was out and I got a “fix-it” ticket. But what struck me was how disorientating it all was. Blinding high beams and flashers in your mirror, then a 1,000 watt flashlight in your face, verbal directions in a tone and manner that are foreign. There was absolutely a part of me thinking “what if I accidentally do something that escalates this?” I felt beforehand, but I 100% believe now, the comment “why didn’t he comply” is utter bullshit. Compliance is not a black & white issue, even though it is too often treated that way and with deadly consequences. And my experience is likely a 1 on a scale of 1 to 1,000 of what we will see here.

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Submitted by: BirdLaw900

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3 / 17

District Of Columbia’s Finest

District Of Columbia’s Finest

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Photo: Celal Gunes (Getty Images)

I used to live in DC and after buying a new home on Capitol Hill, I would make almost daily trips to Home Depot through a somewhat dodgy neighborhood. On one of those trips, I was stuck behind a car going under 20 mph and decided to LEGALLY pass it on a two lane, one way road, using my turn signals properly, and might have gone a hair over the 25 mph speed limit but knowing that there were lots of cops in the area, I knew not to speed. One block after passing the car, I see two of DC’s finest in my wing mirror and there were two or three officers with heir hands on their holsters while the other officer approached my window.

The officer asked if I was in a hurry and why I was passing so aggressively and recklessly. I responded that I passed legally in a passing lane to go around a car that was obstructing the flow of traffic. They took my license and registration and after fifteen or so tense minutes, decided to give me a verbal warning and let me go on my way. What really happened was they saw a youngish guy in a niceish car (new Lexus IS) go through a dodgy neighborhood and assumed I was there for illicit purposes and when they saw I had a clean record, they let me go.

A runner up goes to the time that I was pulled over by another DC cop on NY Ave, forced to wait 15-20 minutes, and was given a warning for going 4 mph over the speed limit in a 35 mph zone. What really happened was I pulled off the line at a traffic light slightly faster than the police car next to me and the officer was having a bad day and unfortunately took it out on me. Keep in mind, I accelerated in a reasonable, non-aggressive manner, and stayed in my lane. I was pretty surprised when they pulled me over since most people on NY Ave are going 20 over the limit and weaving in and out of lanes.

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Submitted by: oddseth

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4 / 17

‘Can’t Drive Forty-Five’

‘Can’t Drive Forty-Five’

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Photo: George Rose (Getty Images)

A two for.

Years ago, we had a big dog and a minivan that would roll the door windows down. Spike (named after the rugrats dog) had his head out of the window and my wife was bored. So we wanted to see how fast we could go before he would stick his head back in. Spike was huffing and puffing as those giant nostrils supercharged his face. Then the cop busted us. Wrote us up for 84 in a 65, but had come down 11 mph or so to keep from having to see us in court.

My wife’s one and only ticket. So she made me drive. And she watched speed limit signs like a hawk. I was entering a different state and as I crested a hill in a 55 mph zone, I saw a beige car next to a 45 mph sign next to the speed limit sign. I slowed down and passed that car at an indicated 42 mph when the lights on the unmarked turned on and pulled me over.

I got a ticket for 47 in a 45. He said that since I could see the speed limit at the top of the hill, I was in the 45 mph zone and the fact I slowed down after I saw the sign was an indication I knew I had been speeding.

My ticket was $150 MORE than my wife’s.

[...]

Across a state line. He waited until he saw my out of state tag before he wrote me up. I wasn’t going to take off work and show up in court on Tuesday and we both knew it. He actually asked when the last time I got a ticket and when I told him it was years ago, he said I was due.

One of those towns that has more cops than residents.

Submitted by: hoser68

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5 / 17

Red And Blue Axe To Grind

Red And Blue Axe To Grind

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Photo: Ben Hasty (Getty Images)

Back when the Charger was my everyday car, I was commuting to grad school—the same strip of highway every weekday as I did the grind. Then one day I got nailed for speeding. Yes, I was over the speed limit—10mph—but it wasn’t as if I was speed-speeding.

The cop was standing by the door and giving me shit. Then he said words to the effect, “I couldn’t get to you yesterday, but I got you today.” So the dickhead cop was grinding an axe over whomever was driving the Charger to make sure he stopped my ass—how “equitable” on his part. I can’t help wondering how many truly speeding jerks he let slide by as he kept waiting for me. All this I thought about the cop without saying a word to that effect—he’s got all the power, you argue, you end up in a deeper hole with the cop, so I bit my tongue.

Had to eat the ticket cost and do the Saturday driver’s ed course—wotta guy!

Submitted by: the1969DodgeChargerFan

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6 / 17

A Case Of Excessive Force, Casual Misogyny

A Case Of Excessive Force, Casual Misogyny

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Photo: Columbus Division of Ploce

It’s the early 90s, it’s like 9pm and my girlfriend and I are driving to the Kinkos on High Street in Columbus Ohio because they have a color copier and if you’re an art school student, this is makes package design projects SO MUCH EASIER.

High street is basically the divider between Ohio State Campus and Columbus, so it’s full of bars and drunk frat boys. And cops with really shitty attitudes.

As we’re driving, a car almost blows a stop sign (we definitely had the right of way) and so my girlfriend, sitting in the passenger seat, flips that car the bird and yells “learn how to drive” or something like that. Next thing I know, that car has pulled onto the road behind us and red and blue lights are flashing. Turns out it was a cop car.

The cop pulls me out of the car, slams me on the hood of the car, frisks me and tells me, “boy, you had better control your woman or she’s gonna get you hurt.” Mind you, the cop calling me boy was probably the same age as me. No “license and registration”, no “do you have any idea why I pulled you over,” just “control your woman.”

But, I was a privileged white kid going to a private art school so that’s really the worst that happened to me. I can’t imagine how it would have gone if we weren’t a couple of white kids.

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Submitted by: Buckfiddiousagain

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7 / 17

Welcome To Boston

Welcome To Boston

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Photo: Stuart Cahill (Getty Images)

I had just moved cross-country to suburban Boston — Belmont, for those of you who might know the area — arriving on a Saturday and driving to my first day of work on the following Monday. Rolling into town center, I see a local cop on the side of the road with a radar gun. I glance down at my speedometer, see I’m doing the speed limit and think nothing more about it.

Right before I hit the city line to the next suburb, another local cop pulls out of a side street and immediately lights me up. I pull right over, put my hands on the top of the steering wheel and wait for the cop to come to my door.

After asking for my license and insurance, the cop told me why he pulled me over:

Cop: I thought your plates were expired. But they’re not.

Me: I know this, officer.

Cop: I see you’re wearing your seat belt now. My fellow officer said you weren’t.

Me: Officer, I always wear my seat belt (not mentioning that if you drove as hard as I do, you’d always wear your seat belt too).

I should’ve left it there, but I was ticked off so I didn’t.

Me: Oh. So you pulled me over to see if my plates were expired so you could see if I was wearing my seat belt.

Officer Barely Friendly’s facial expression sours immediately. Evidently he didn’t like being called on his shit.

Cop: You’re from Texas, aren’t you?

Obviously I was dealing with a real Rhodes Scholar here, because the car had Texas tags with longhorns on them, and he was holding my Texas driver’s license in his hands.

Me: Yes sir, I am.

Cop: Are you a college student?

Me: No sir, I’m not. I’m on my way to my first day at work.

The cop literally throws my license and insurance card in my face and starts laying down his law:

Cop: Well you have 30 days to get yourself a Massachusetts driver’s license and Massachusetts plates and registration before I pull you over again and arrest you. *grits his teeth and turns on his heels* Have a nice day.

And that was my introduction to life in Boston.

Submitted by: jrhmobile

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8 / 17

When Your Car “Matched The Description”

When Your Car “Matched The Description”

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Photo: Joe Sohm (Getty Images)

Christmas day, about ten years ago. I was driving my 1991 Acura Integra sedan from my aunt’s home to my in-law’s home after Christmas dinner; about an hour drive. It’s absolutely pouring rain, biblical style and its dark, so I’m going slow. No one on the road because of Christmas dinner I guess. I notice a car just bomb up behind me and damn near park on my bumper so I slow down a little bit so that he can (unsafely) pass me. He doesn’t pass, and just stays there for about two minutes as we continue driving. I’m probably 5 under the 40mph speed limit. As we keep driving I notice a car coming towards me and it shifts into my lane so I start heavy braking. When the car is about 50 feet away, out pop the flashing blue lights, and the car behind me lights me up as well. I sit there, unsure of what do do or what is happening. Maybe 30 seconds pass. Another Trooper pulls up and blocks me in completely. All three cops get out, guns drawn and yank me out of the car. They each grab me and pull me around my door to the hood and throw me on the hood. It’s a long enough drive that I took my jacket off, so I’m just in a button down in the pouring rain with my face smashed down on the hood as the cops pat me down. They are yelling the entire time to stop moving or to listen to them or whatever, I don’t even know. Once they don’t find anything, they start tossing my car, looking for something but don’t find anything. Finally, after two minutes, one cop drives away and the other two tell me that my car matched the description of a stolen car. They said I was free to leave and they flew off in their cars. I was freezing rain, soaking wet, and completely terrified. But, I guess I didn’t get shot, so, it could have been worse...

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Submitted by: Kerberos824

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9 / 17

How Dare You Honk?

How Dare You Honk?

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Photo: Andrew Caballero (Getty Images)

Morning rush hour I was on my motorcycle at the front of lane 2 of a dual turn lane. A police car was in lane 1 and an ambulance was in lane 3 (straight though lane).

The light turned green and I turned into lane 2, kind of like how dual turn lanes are supposed to work.

Police car also turned into lane 2, kind of like how dual turn lanes always seem to work.

Ambulance also turned into lane 2, so I hit the brakes and the horn (keep in mind, this is a stock motorcycle horn, which basically sounds like and asthmatic octogenarian blowing a kazoo) which alerted the ambulance to swing over to lane 3 and take off, and the police car to light up and pull me over.

He comes at me HOT, hand on his gun, demanding an explanation of why I think it’s acceptable to road rage at a police officer. It took about 10 minutes of back and forth of me trying to point out how I was the only one using the dual turn lane properly and him yelling about how using your horn is road rage and therefore illegal, before I finally gave up and said that he and the ambulance would have hit each other, and I was very sorry, but I was just trying not to die while it happened.

He said that he didn’t really agree with any of that, but he was very busy so he’d let me off with a warning.

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Submitted by: TRath

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10 / 17

Empathy For Those Caught Driving While Black

Empathy For Those Caught Driving While Black

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Photo: Frederic J. Brown (Getty Images)

I feel like I’m going to read a list of annoyances from white people, and a list of horror stories from people of colour.

The reality is that white folks (and I am one) cannot comprehend that every traffic stop that an African American faces, could be their last interaction with a human being, ever.

[...]

I have a friend in Minnesota. She and her husband (both white) couldn’t have kids of their own. They adopted two African American boys. She has had to coach her kids on how to not get shot by police during a traffic stop. The boys are now 19 and 17. They’ve been pulled over for Driving While Black, more times than I’ve been pulled over in my 35 years of driving.

It’s the worst lottery in North America. Get the wrong cop and you’re fucked.

Submitted by: JohnnyWasASchoolboy

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11 / 17

Raging Cajun Highway Cops

Raging Cajun Highway Cops

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Photo: Suzi Altman (Getty Images)

Driving a rental with NY tags from Louisiana to Florida...got pulled over 7 times during the length of the trip for various, no legit reasons. Three of those happened before I even got out of Louisiana, the first 30 minutes of just hitting the highway. No tickets issued for any of the stops, just ‘warnings’ for things I wasn’t doing, though my being military police at the time might’ve helped move things along quicker, but doubtful.

Now I understand part of I-20 in La. is supposedly a popular drug corridor around that way, but damn. I had driven that same stretch many times in my own car before and never had a problem, so it kinda felt like something about those tags that day made it a patrol car magnet.

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Submitted by: Barada_nikto_byotch

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12 / 17

When Campus Police Pulls You Over

When Campus Police Pulls You Over

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Photo: Celal Gunes (Getty Images)

I only have one and it was similar to yours in that I was a young and dumb college kid. Running late for finals of course, and I used to have the stupid logic of speeding if I saw a cop car by getting behind it. Well my dumb ass over did it of course and the cop saw me pulling up on him fast, turned his lights on (for a sec i thought he was going to pursue someone else because it couldn’t be me he was gonna pull over right?) slowed down and cut everyone off behind me to get behind my car. Being a mile from my exit I figured I might as well get to school and park since i’m already going to be later now. Cop gets down does the ol you know how fast you were going, yadda yadda. I tried using the old “i’m sorry just running late for finals and if I don’t get in I”ll fail” dude wrote me up a speeding ticket and told me “don’t worry if you made it this far, you’ll be fine” THANKS SO MUCH OFFICER! ended up getting defensive driving and learning maybe not to speed, especially behind an officer.

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Submitted by: cargone!cargone!

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13 / 17

Rocky Mountain Road Trip

Rocky Mountain Road Trip

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Photo: Aaron Ontiveroz (Getty Images)

Not my worst, but certainly the most annoying 2 traffic stops within 10 miles of each other. I picked up a 1985 Peugeot 505 GL Wagon (white over blue vinyl, 5-speed, manual windows) in NY in the Summer of 1995 and drove it back to CA with a friend, mostly on HWY70.

We crossed the CO border in the middle of nowhere on a clear afternoon and according to my calculations, we would see the Rocky Mountains before sunset. I was really looking forward to it, as its quite a sight. But a mile past the “Welcome to Colorado” sign I see a Colorado State Patrol cruiser pass me in the opposite lane with the trooper’s head swiveling in my direction. Sure enough, he crossed the median and started tailing me. I was not speeding, and he just sat behind me for a few miles. Trying not to get stressed and too annoyed, I took the next exit and pulled into a service station. As I was gassing up, I could see the trooper parked down the road, facing my direction. So, I slowed the pump down and went into the mini-mart and waited. After about 10 minutes the cop leaves and hits the westbound onramp.

All clear. We get back on the road but less than 10 miles later, there he is again passing me in the eastbound lane, crosses the median and starts tailing me for a few miles before lighting me up. The patrolman me for my papers, where I’m going, why I have NY plates, but does not tell me why he pulled me over, so I asked. He said my car was “unusual” and then proceeds to question why I have a European sounding name, but I look Hispanic! I respond with, “Officer, are you racially profiling me? Is that why you pulled me over? I did nothing wrong, am driving the speed limit, and I would really like to see the Rocky’s before sunset. Can you please run my license so I can get going?” He steps back, almost startled, and heads to his cruiser. After 10 minutes he hands me my license and we’re on our way again.

But less than 5 minutes later, there’s another cruiser headed in the opposite direction, with the trooper eyeing me. He too crosses the median, tails me for a few miles and lights me up. Now I’m pissed. I lost 20 minutes with the last clown, and I was starting to lose daylight. The trooper walks up and before he says anything I hand him my license and registration and tell him quite sternly that I just got pulled over by another officer down the road and he cleared me, that I did nothing wrong, and my papers are in order, and ask him why he pulled me over. His response? I was “going the speed limit which is unusual in these parts.” Then he asks me if there are drugs in the vehicle. “No and I don’t do drugs.” Have I been drinking? “I don’t drink and drive.” He then commands me to get out of the car and asks what’s in the back. I tell him he can see for himself through the windows – mountain bikes, camping gear, cooler and clothing. Then he wants to search the car – I said no. Then he threatens to bring a drug sniffing dog, I tell him he’d be wasting his time and to please just run my license so I can get on my way and maybe, just maybe, still see the Rocky’s at sunset. After 20 minutes we are cleared and its starting to get dark.

We never saw the Rocky’s and to this day I still get pissed off thinking about those dimwitted idiots with badges.

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Submitted by: sfrobert

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14 / 17

Got A Fine And The Bike Died Anyway

Got A Fine And The Bike Died Anyway

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Photo: Joe Sohm (Getty Images)

I was in my early ‘20's, living in Kansas City in an apartment that didn’t have covered parking. I had a car and a motorcycle, but I kept the motorcycle in my parents’ garage off in a suburb, and would head over to ride it when I could. The first nice day of spring I headed over there to get it cleaned up for the summer. While there I picked up a few pieces of mail, including my insurance card which I put under the seat of the bike, and the receipt for the insurance which went in my pocket. The bike had been sitting too long and the battery was dead, so once I got it started I thought I’d take it for a quick spin on the freeway to hopefully finish charging it or find out if the battery needed to be replaced, despite the bike having (slightly) expired tags. So of course I got pulled over right as I was heading for the freeway. I stopped on the on-ramp and the cop asked for my insurance. It’s under the seat, which meant I had to either shut off the bike to use the key to unlock the seat not knowing if I could start it again, or get a ticket for no insurance. I showed him the receipt for the insurance, but that wasn’t good enough for some reason, so I took the ticket because I had no idea how else I’d get the bike started. This meant I would have an hour drive to that county’s courthouse to void the ticket once I had proof of insurance (which was less than a foot away), plus a ticket for expired tags. With the cop finally gone I put it in gear to pull away, but the uphill ramp and the noise from the freeway kept me from giving it enough gas and I stalled it. After all that, I stalled it. I could have shut off the bike, given the cop my proof of insurance and avoided a trip to the courthouse. I ended up having to turn the bike around and coast down the wrong way on the shoulder of the on-ramp so I could dump the clutch to get it started, and luckily didn’t get pulled over.

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Submitted by:dug deep

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15 / 17

Driving In A “Stolen” Van

Driving In A “Stolen” Van

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Photo: Ohio State Highway Patrol

I wrote a sentence or two earlier. I’d written this up when it happened so I wouldn’t forget the details, but it took a while to find it.

I had to drive from NE PA to Indiana, to pick up my daughter from college. Because we had to haul all her stuff back for the summer, I needed a van, so I borrowed one from work. The night before we left, I grabbed a tag, and filled out temporary registration info, and picked out an ‘11 Grand Caravan (nice van, even being a Chrysler product).

It’s basically a 500+ mile trip on I-80, through PA, OH, and IN; maybe 9-10 hours, stopping every 2-3 hours to stretch. Traveling out Thursday was uneventful, other than it was chilly and rainy. We loaded her up Friday morning after her last final, and after stopping to eat we were on our way around noon.

It was a beautiful day for driving, 70* with no wind, and not a cloud in the sky. We crossed into Ohio around 2PM, and around 2:30 we were looking for the next rest stop. Motoring along with the cruise set at 74 (speed limit in Oh is 70), Mrs said, “Cop ahead.”

“It’s OK, I’m not speeding, and anyhow that Jetta just passed me.” And sure enough, I looked in the rear view and the cop pulled out. “Looks like he’s getting pulled over,” I said.

Except it didn’t happen. The cruiser took up position right off my left flank, and tracked me. I slowed down, from 74 to 70; the cop slowed down. I slowed down to 65; the cop slowed down. “Ahhhh, hell.” I said to the girls. “I can’t believe it. I’m going to get ticketed for going 74. What a ticky-tack state!”

The cop tracked me for about 5 miles, and then I looked in the rear view, and flying up from waaaaaay back was one of those Hemi Charger pursuit cars, all black with the real skinny light bar, headlights flashing and light bar blinking. “Ahhh, backup,” I thought. “They must be going after that guy, she was waiting.” But as soon as he got up in place, they both pulled in behind me, the first car threw on the lights and siren, and I pulled over immediately. “Son of a bitch,” I thought. “I really am going to get ticketed for 74!”

I turned off the ignition, and put my hands on the wheel like a good citizen; rule number one is to maximize your chance of talking your way out of it. But they were both out of the car, and yelling at me! Huh? What kind of stop was this? I put down my window, and they were yelling, “PUT YOUR HANDS WHERE WE CAN SEE THEM!” I looked in the rear view, and I couldn’t hear them, but the officer from the first car, a woman, was motioning me to get out. I got out, and started walking back, thinking that this wasn’t like any other traffic stop I’d ever been in, and I noticed that the guy from the Hemi had a riot shotgun pointed right at me. And they were yelling, “TURN AROUND! TURN AROUND! PUT YOUR HANDS BEHIND YOUR HEAD AND WALK BACKWARD TO US, SLOWLY!”

Holy shit.

OK, now I was really confused. But I figured out that my best course of action right then was to turn around, put my hands behind my head, and walk backward to them, slowly.

When I got there, the first officer, who did all the talking the entire time, said, “Okay. put your hands behind your back. Do you have anything sharp, and weapons, anything that could hurt me?” And she proceeded to pat me down, and of course I had nothing. “Okay, turn around, put your hands in the air where we can see them.” Meanwhile, the other guy had the shotgun leveled at me.

“I need to tell you,” I said, “I am confused, and scared as hell that you are going to mistake my confusion for noncompliance. Please, don’t tase me. If you tase me you will kill me, I have a heart condition.” They didn’t say anything, they didn’t change expression, nothing. The officer said, “Do you have ID on you?”

ID! “Yes,” I said, and I reached for my wallet. IMMEDIATELY the shotgun came up to attention! “Slowly,” she said. I got out my drivers license. She took it.

“Where are you coming from?” She asked. I told her, picking up my daughter from college.

“Is that your family in there?”

“Yes, my wife and my daughter. Can I ask, what is this about? I am really confused.”

“Who does this van belong to?” I told her, Nationwide Car Sales. “Do you own the dealership?” “No.” “Do you work there?” “Yes, I borrowed a van to pick up my daughter from school.”

“You really don’t have any idea why we stopped you, do you... The reason is, when you passed through the Westgate, they snapped a photo of your license plate, and it’s been reported as stolen.”

“WHAT? I grabbed a tag out of a stack of tags! We’ve been using these tags daily, there’s nothing wrong with them!” And just then, over the speaker clipped to her lapel, the dispatcher said, “Plate number is registered to Nationwide Car Sales.” Ahh. Finally, something is going right.

“Okay, now I understand,” I said.

“It’s a dealer tag. I’ve seen it happen before. If I really thought this car was stolen, you’d all be out here on the ground, face down and handcuffed. But sometimes a plate is reported stolen, and some states replace it with the same number. I need to ask some questions, I’m going to call Nationwide Car Sales.”

“Can I put my hands down now?” I’d been holding my hands up for about 15 minutes. As soon as I said that, the shotgun came right back up to attention.

“No, that’s OK, keep them up where I can see them for now,” she said. She went back to her car, and talked to someone for a couple minutes. Ringo kept the shotgun on me. He looked like he was itching to make the newspapers.

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Submitted by: Mosca

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16 / 17

Driving In A “Stolen” Van (Cont.)

Driving In A “Stolen” Van (Cont.)

Image for article titled Here Are Your Worst Traffic Stop Stories
Photo: Ohio State Highway Patrol

She came back and said, “OK, you can go back and sit in your car, I have to make some more calls.”

“Can I have my license back?”

“No, I’ll hold onto it for now.”

I went back to my car and told the girls. “I knew it!” Said my daughter. “I thought you were just being an asshole when you put your hands in the air,” said my wife (always the sense of humor about things, her).

Just then my cell phone rang. It was John, the GM, the guy I run Nationwide with, and the guy who is in charge of a lot of the admin stuff. I told him what happened.

“Yeah, I just got the call. I’m on my way over to the police station now to sort it out. We renewed all the plates, and reported the lost tags. I had Dawn check the numbers with the state... the guy at the Wilkes-Barre Township Police Department switched the lists, and reported all the good tags lost or stolen, and renewed all the lost ones!”

OH.

Just then, the trooper came up to my window. “I have John on the phone now, would you like to talk to him? I asked.

“No, I’ll call him myself,” she said. And then she asked me questions: Address of the business? Phone number? Dealer number? Who owns it, and how can I reach him? (I didn’t tell her that, that would be death. I told her that I worked there for 5 years and I’ve seen him 3 times, which is a little bit of a stretch but mostly true.) Then she took the girls’ IDs, and went back to her car.

Meanwhile, the whole time Ringo has that shotgun pointed at the van.

We sat there. Remember when we got pulled over, we we looking for the next rest stop? Yeah. It was coming up on an hour now. I looked in the rear view, and saw her talking on the radio to someone, then waiting, then talking, then throwing her clipboard on the dash, then waiting, then talking...

Finally Ringo lowered the gun, got in his black Hemi Charger, turned off his lights and floored it out of there. I took a deep breath and let it out. Finally.

But we were still sitting there, waiting. It was now coming up on 4PM. There were only a few things that could happen now. From best outcome to worst:

* She could let us go on our way. That would be cool.

* She could let us go on our way, but give me a ticket for an improper registration. That would sort of suck, but I could understand.

* She could be waiting for a tow truck. She might be a real stickler for the rules, and figure that she couldn’t let us continue without a valid registration. That would REALLY suck, because then we’d be in god-knows-where-Ohio, with no idea what to do next, and no idea when we’d get home.

And that last one, that would really suck because our daughter was leaving for a service trip to Peru in a week, and needed to have a lot of doctor’s appointments and such filled in the next week, and all her stuff was in the car.

Finally, she got out of her car, and walked over to the passenger window.

“I figured something like this,” she said. Talking to my wife, “If I really thought this was stolen, you’d have all been out on the ground handcuffed, face down.”

“Mrs laughed. “Well thank goodness for that! We’d have been crying and crying!” And finally the officer smiled.

“Here’s what I did. I couldn’t get anyone from the station to tell me anything. So I took the ‘hit’ off your plate. DON’T GET STOPPED. If you get stopped, they’ll run the tag, and it will come up stolen again. I didn’t file a report, so this incident won’t show up, and you’ll have to go through this all again. But at least no one will be looking for you now. You can go on your way now. Drive safely.”

“I appreciate your professionalism,” I said (yes, I really said exactly that). “I thought I was going to get ticketed for 74, and then I was confused as hell, but once I could see that it was going to get sorted out I felt a lot better. Thank you for being so professional. I have no problem with how it went down... I’m just not happy that it happened to be ME.” She smiled, but didn’t answer other than to say, “Have a good drive, sir.” “And you stay safe, officer!” said Mrs Mosca. And we parted.

And that was it. The next rest stop was 28 miles. We drove at 70/71mph. We made it to the rest stop, then made it home by 11PM, two hours past our target time of 9PM, but safe.

All in all, I have no complaints about how this was handled. I want the police to catch the bad guys. I have no problem with plates getting photoed and checked; if I have the right to photograph the police, they have the right to photograph a license plate displayed publicly. And a stolen car, that is the type of thing that could result in a bigger bust: drugs, kidnapping, other robberies, anything. Stuff happens.

But I will tell you this: I have had a gun pointed at me twice in my life, once by a cop and once by a criminal. Both are equally terrifying.

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Submitted by: Mosca

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