The Daily - Why Do So Many Traffic Stops Go Wrong?
Episode Date: November 1, 2021This episode contains strong language and scenes of violence. Over the past five years, police officers in the United States have killed more than 400 unarmed drivers or passengers — a rate of more... than one a week, a Times investigation has found.Why are such cases so common, and why is the problem so hard to fix?Guest: David D. Kirkpatrick, a national correspondent for The New York Times. Love listening to New York Times podcasts? Help us test a new audio product in beta and give us your thoughts to shape what it becomes. Visit nytimes.com/audio to join the beta.Sign up here to get The Daily in your inbox each morning. And for an exclusive look at how the biggest stories on our show come together, subscribe to our newsletter. Background reading: Officers, trained to presume danger, can react with outsize aggression during traffic stops — sometimes with fatal consequences.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From The New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi.
This is The Daily.
Today, a Times investigation shows that police killed 400 unarmed drivers or passengers during
traffic stops over the last five years.
I spoke to my colleague, David Kirkpatrick,
about why so many traffic stops go wrong
and why the problem is so hard to fix.
It's Monday, November 1st.
David, where did you start this investigation?
Well, it started right after the conviction of Derek Chauvin, the police officer who had pulled George Floyd out of the driver's seat of a car and then killed him on the sidewalk.
There had been a number of other instances of unarmed drivers, mostly African-Americans, killed by police at vehicle stops, including Dante Wright in Minnesota. There was an Army Lieutenant, Karen Nazario, who was pulled over in Pepper Strait in Virginia. So we wanted to know, is this happening as often as it seems, unarmed drivers getting killed at vehicle stops? And if it is happening a lot, why?
So what did you do to answer those questions?
What did you do first?
Well, my colleagues in investigation,
Steve Eder and Kim Barker and I,
began with a list of 5,000 people killed by police over the last five years.
We got that from data put together already
by the Washington Post and two research organizations
mapping police violence and fatal encounters. From there, we collected all the news reports
and court records and, whenever possible, audio and video recordings of these killings that we
could. And we tried to isolate the people who were killed at vehicle stops, the people who were
unarmed, not carrying a gun or a knife, not threatening the police with a weapon. And also, we tossed out everybody who was being pursued for a
violent crime. So no bank robbers, no murderers on the run. We wanted to isolate just the killings
at vehicle stops that seemed the most questionable, the most potentially avoidable. And what we got
was about 400 drivers or passengers over that five-year period who were killed at vehicle stops.
That's about six a month or more than one a week.
Six a month. That sounds like a lot.
Yeah. And as in other killings by American police, African Americans were disproportionately overrepresented.
In many cases, when we talked to the families of the drivers who'd been killed,
they said, you know, I don't think my relative would have been pulled over if he or she wasn't
black. Now, if you look at all of the 400 unarmed drivers we identified, in many cases, they were
drunk or under the influence of drugs, or they had drugs in the car, or for one reason or another,
they tried to flee. But that said, none of that means they deserve to be killed by the side of the road.
Right. And what did you find out about why these traffic stops become so violent?
Well, the first part of the answer comes pretty quickly.
We started talking to police officers or former police officers,
and the first thing they'd say is, well, people get killed at traffic stops
because we're told that traffic stops are very dangerous to us.
And we began looking into that.
We collected training manuals.
We interviewed trainers.
And we found out as much as we could about the process of teaching cops how to do vehicle stops.
And what we learned is that they're often told that more officers are killed stopping vehicles than in any other context. That's the
most common way for an officer to be killed. In the most aggressive training manuals, they say
point blank, every driver could be a killer. Watch out. Wow. So it's really drummed into them from
the very beginning of their life as a police officer. That's exactly right. Throughout their
training and then repeatedly through their career at roll call briefings before they go on duty, of their life as a police officer. That's exactly right. Throughout their training,
and then repeatedly through their career
at roll call briefings before they go on duty,
they're shown videos that show easygoing, tolerant cops
getting mowed down by drivers
who whip out guns out of nowhere.
There's one especially iconic video.
Driver, step back here to me.
Come on back here for me.
An officer named Kyle Dinkheller, who pulled over a pickup truck in Georgia in the 1990s.
Keep your hands out of your pockets, sir.
Sir.
You goddamn it, here I am.
You motherfucking ass.
Come here.
Here I am.
Here I am.
Sir, come here.
The driver jumps out, and he's jumping around like a madman.
He's dancing.
And he's not obeying any of the police officer's orders.
And after a while...
I've been doing my life!
Get back here now!
Drop the gun now!
The driver pulls out
a semi-automatic weapon.
Drop the gun now!
And he guns down the officer
right there,
and it's captured
on the officer's own dash cam.
So Kyle Dinkheller has really become a martyr,
and seemingly every officer I talk to knows who he is,
and his name stands for the ever-present danger to police
whenever they're pulling over a vehicle.
That sense of peril has become so ingrained that when officers are walking
over to the driver's side window, when they're pulling over a car, they'll often put four fingers
on the trunk. The reason they're trained to do that is to leave fingerprints. That way, if the
officer is ambushed and killed by the driver, detectives, when they find the car, will know who did it.
It's almost like a kind of tactile reminder of just how dangerous pulling over a car is for a cop.
Okay, so what I'm hearing you say is that vehicle stops are really dangerous for police officers.
I mean, this is what this is all laying out for me.
Well, what the police are told in their training isn't really the full picture.
Over the five-year period we looked at, 20% of all those officers killed in crimes while
on duty were killed by motorists they had pulled over.
So in a sense, that is a lot.
But at the same time, it's misleading.
It's misleading because traffic stops are the most common way police interact with civilians.
They perform tens of millions of them every year.
And when you look at the sheer number of traffic killed at a vehicle stop is less than one in 3.6 million.
If you isolate just the ordinary traffic stops, you know, not chasing a felon, it's less than one in six million.
Oh, wow. That's very small.
Yeah, so that really is a relatively small chance.
I called some statisticians who study this kind of thing, and they said someone is more likely to die going for a horse ride or taking a swim.
So even though officers are taught that traffic stops are incredibly dangerous, that's not actually true.
That's right. It's misleading.
And that assumption has consequences.
What we see is that officers are trained to think that because it's so dangerous,
they need to have total control. Hey, stay away. You're distracting me. You're going to go to jail
if you interfere, right? You are interfering. And that leads them sometimes to treat mere disobedience as a mortal threat.
To retaliate against backtalk or evasion.
Or a lack of compliance.
Sometimes with threats of deadly force.
Or even occasionally deadly force. Get a guard! Get a guard!
And also, it has another consequence.
So on the one hand, because of this fear,
you see a very understandable kind of aggression on the part of the officers.
But then, after the fact, you see a very understandable kind of aggression on the part of the officers.
But then after the fact, you also find that prosecutors and courts grant extra leeway for the use of force to police who are performing traffic stops because of the perceived danger.
So what does that look like? We should be clear. A police officer is only allowed to use deadly force if the police officer reasonably fears an imminent threat to the police officer's life or someone else's life.
They're not allowed to use deadly force just to punish disobedience.
for danger at these vehicle stops,
prosecutors, judges, and juries are often inclined to accept
that the police officer really did
fear for his or her life,
even when, in fact,
the actual danger is very debatable.
In our list of 400 deaths of unarmed drivers,
we found dozens of cases
where officers shot motorists
just because the motorists just because
the motorists were reaching for something or holding an object that turned out not to be a gun.
That includes, in one case, holding a bottle of antifreeze, in another case, a bag of sandwiches,
many times, of course, just cell phones. So it's very easy for a judge or jury to accept that the
driver was reaching for something and the officer credibly believed it could have been a gun, or perhaps the driver was revving his engine and the officer
credibly believed that even if the driver was probably trying to escape, he could also run
down the officer. So when a vehicle is involved, given this reputation for danger, it's very easy
for the officer to say to a prosecutor or a judge or a jury, look, I really did fear for my life.
Courts often assess the use of deadly force
based only on the final moment when an officer pulls the trigger.
But we looked at more than 120 videos of those killings,
and we found that if you roll back the video and look
at the larger context, often the story is much more complicated. We'll be right back.
So David, you said that what actually happens during these traffic stops is more complicated
than what the public ends up seeing. How so? What did your reporting show? Well, our colleagues in the New York Times
visual investigations team isolated 120 of these videos of killings at vehicle stops.
They picked out the videos where you could really see clearly what was happening at the moment
of the actual shooting. And what they found was that
in 45 of these 120 cases, the officer had actually put him or herself at risk, what criminologists
call officer-created jeopardy. That means the police officer had stepped in front of a moving
vehicle or reached into the door or the window of a vehicle. And the officer had put his own life in jeopardy and then cited that jeopardy as a reason for killing the driver.
What's happening here is the officer takes a moment of disobedience and turns it into a life or death encounter.
It's going to be you or it's going to be me.
The officer says, all right, you're not listening to me and trying to flee.
Well, I'm going to make that a choice between your life and my life.
So the driver isn't exactly following orders, but the officer makes it into a life or death
encounter.
Right.
So one of the videos we looked at is the killing of a driver named Colton LeBlanc.
Colton LeBlanc is driving his pickup truck.
He's driving erratically.
A Louisiana State trooper pulls him over.
Step out for me, please.
Step over here.
LeBlanc gets out of the car.
Louisiana State Police.
The reason I pulled you over is because you didn't use the turn signal.
And he has a conversation with the trooper.
The trooper starts out fairly polite.
Asks for his license.
LeBlanc heads back to his car to get the license.
And that's when things start to go wrong.
You can see in the video, LeBlanc is putting his foot on the brake.
He's reaching for the ignition.
A second later, LeBlanc puts the car in gear.
LeBlanc, at this point, is only suspected of possibly being a drunk driver.
Tactically, trainers would tell you the right thing for the officer to do is to let him drive away.
You've got his license plate number. You could follow him.
Instead, this Louisiana State trooper grabs the open door.
He hangs himself over the open door with his left hand as LeBlanc is beginning to drive away.
And he shouts to LeBlanc, stop, stop, stop the car. But LeBlanc is not stopping the car.
And at that point, the trooper has hung himself off the open door of a moving pickup truck,
and his life really is in jeopardy. He pulls out his gun with his right hand,
and he shoots LeBlanc three times.
In the torso, the arm, and the ear.
Get on the ground right now!
Get on the ground right now! Get on the ground!
LeBlanc died in the hospital.
So, you're saying that when you look at the shooting itself, you're only really getting half the picture.
Because when you rewind the film and you look at the whole thing, you understand that it's not always as simple as the officer was afraid for his life.
That's right.
Advocates for the police would say, look, this driver was disobedient and actually threatened the police officer, which is true.
But at the same time, choices by that officer turned what might have been an innocuous or routine encounter into a life or death challenge that ended in the driver dying.
Right. That this disobedience becomes a potentially lethal thing. That's right.
Disobedience becomes a capital crime. So David, as you describe all of this to me,
there's one thing I'm kind of getting stuck on, which is if police officers are trained that
stops are so dangerous and often put themselves in unnecessary risk when they do them, then
why not do fewer of them?
I mean, you said that they do tens of millions of stops a year.
Well, a part of the answer is money. Two of my other colleagues in investigations,
Mike McIntyre and Michael Keller, were really intrigued about the incident where police in
Virginia had pulled over Army Lieutenant Caron Nazario. They'd pulled
him over and pepper sprayed him and threatened him. And my colleagues found that that same week,
the town council was questioning the police chief about why ticket revenue was declining.
Wow. And they began to wonder how important was ticket revenue for this town and other towns like it.
And what they found was really surprising.
More than 730 municipalities rely on fines and fees for at least 10% of their revenue.
In one town in Louisiana, that was more than 85% of its revenue.
They found a bunch of small towns out there that issue more tickets each year
than they have residents. That's crazy. Yeah. And in many of these places, the money they bring in
for tickets is going to their own training, to the police benevolent fund, or to other benefits.
And what's more, they found that the federal government has a role in this. The federal government gives out $600 million a year to municipalities for traffic enforcement. And to get that money,
states have to present plans for their traffic enforcement. And in at least 20 of those states,
they explicitly evaluate police on the number of traffic stops they make. In some towns,
cops are told outright, you have to make this many
stops per hour. So they're directly financially incentivized to be making a lot of traffic stops.
Yeah, they are. And some of these towns that rely disproportionately on ticket revenue
were also disproportionately stopping black drivers. For example, in the town of Newburgh Heights,
that's about a half square mile town with 2,000 residents just south of Cleveland.
Tickets account for more than half of their town revenue. 22% of the town's residents are black,
and yet black people make up 76% of their license and insurance violations and 63% of
speeding cases driving through the town. Wow. So basically this is a primarily white town
right outside of Cleveland. They send a lot of troopers out to the highway and they catch a
disproportionate number of black drivers on their way down the highway, getting out of town.
When my colleagues asked about the disproportionate number of black drivers on their way down the highway getting out of town. When my colleagues
asked about the disproportionate number of black drivers they were pulling over on the road out of
Cleveland, the mayor said, we don't really control who drives through our community.
We also talked to a former police officer and criminologist who's African-American,
and he said he thought that traffic stops were a kind of special problem for racial bias. As he put it, police think
traffic stops are dangerous, police think Black people are dangerous, and the combination is
volatile. And add to that what you just said, which is that officers are incentivized to run
up the numbers, stop a lot of cars to get money from fines. Yeah. Now, advocates for the police
would say, look, traffic stops are important
because it gets dangerous drivers off the road. And the risks to police are real. So courts and
the public need to make special allowances for the fact that those police have to make tough,
split-second, life-or-death decisions under pressure. And other people, including judges
and juries, shouldn't be
second-guessing those choices. Critics of the police would say, if there were more accountability,
if more agencies and officers were punished in some way or held liable for the avoidable
killing of drivers, then they would have an incentive to cut it out. I'll tell you what we
found. When we looked through these cases, we found that of
the 400 unarmed drivers killed by police at vehicle stops that we had identified, in those cases,
only about 30 officers were charged with a crime. And in those roughly 30 cases, only five police
officers have been convicted of any crime. One of them was given probation and no jail time.
And another one of those five was Derek Chauvin
for the killing of George Floyd.
In the vast majority of the cases that we looked at,
the officers who had killed these unarmed drivers
suffered no penalty or consequences.
In many cases, the officers were praised for their conduct.
One case that stood out for us was the case of Deputy Jason Henratty.
In January of 2019, he joined a chase, along with several other deputies, of a GMC Yukon that had initially been pulled over for a broken taillight.
The GMC Yukon led them on a wild chase across the county.
Finally, one of the deputies forced it to spin out on a lawn.
And at that point, Deputy Henretti got out of his own police vehicle
to try to approach the SUV.
It lurched forward again,
and the video of that encounter shows that he reached out his left arm,
he put it on the hood, and pushed off.
And at that point, he's arguably safe.
The GMC is moving by him,
but he pulled out his sidearm with his right hand
and he fired several shots into the driver's side window,
injuring the driver, a 20-year-old pregnant woman,
and passing through her to kill her passenger.
Now, that's an avoidable death.
And yet, a few months later, the sheriff promoted Deputy Henretti to sergeant.
The next year, the sheriff awarded him a Medal of Valor.
And in the ceremony, his actions were praised as truly heroic.
And in the ceremony, his actions were praised as truly heroic.
David, thank you.
Thank you. We'll be right back.
Thank you. message on efforts to control climate change. Meeting in Rome, the leaders pledged to work to restrict the global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius by the end of the century.
The number is seen as a critical threshold for limiting the most severe effects of climate change.
And the United States and the European Union have reached a major breakthrough that will address the existential threat of climate change while also protecting American jobs and American industry.
President Biden struck a deal to roll back tariffs on European steel and aluminum imports, resolving a bitter trade dispute with the EU, which began under President Trump three years ago.
trade dispute with the EU, which began under President Trump three years ago. In return,
the EU will drop its retaliatory tariffs on American goods like orange juice, bourbon, and motorcycles. and Sydney Harper. It was edited by Larissa Anderson and Michael Benoit and engineered by Chris Wood.
Contains original music
by Rochelle Banja,
Dan Powell,
and Alicia Baitube.
Our theme music is by
Jim Brumberg and Ben Landsberg
of Wonderly.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Sabrina Tavernisi.
See you tomorrow.