Texas Cops Arrest About 45,000 Drivers a Year for Minor Traffic Offenses
A new report finds that such arrests are most common in Waco, while resulting injuries are most common in Houston.

The practice of arresting drivers for minor traffic violations in Texas first received wide national attention as a result of the 2001 Supreme Court decision in Atwater v. Lago Vista, which upheld the handcuffing, booking, and jailing of a woman who violated a state law requiring drivers and front-seat passengers to wear seat belts. In 2016 such rough treatment of motorists became even more controversial when a 28-year-old woman named Sandra Bland, who was arrested after a state trooper stopped her for failing to signal a lane change, died of an apparent suicide in the Waller County jail. A new report from the Texas group Just Liberty, based on data reported under a 2017 state law passed in response to the Bland incident, estimates that "more than 45,000 Texas drivers were arrested at traffic stops for Class C misdemeanors last year" and were therefore unnecessarily exposed to the risk of injury as well as the trauma of being hauled off to jail in handcuffs.
Class C misdemeanors are traffic and city ordinance violations that are typically handled with citations. Based on Just Liberty's analysis of 2018 data from cities with populations of more than 50,000, that is what happens more than 99 percent of the time. But because there are so many traffic stops—3 million in the data set used for this report—the absolute number of arrests is large.
Among traffic stops by local police departments, arrests for Class C misdemeanors were most common in Waco, at 451 per 10,000 stops (4.5 percent), nearly seven times the average of 67 (0.7 percent). Injuries associated with police use of force during such arrests were most common in Houston, where they were reported in 53 per 10,000 stops, three times the average rate of 17 per 10,000. The injury rate for the Texas Department of Public Safety, which was responsible for Bland's arrest, was more than double that average. Just Liberty notes that cases where injuries were reported are "likely a small subset of all force incidents at traffic stops."

In 2015, for instance, an Austin police officer stopped a 26-year-old elementary school teacher named Breaion King for speeding and ended up yanking her from her car, pulling her across the parking lot, and throwing her to the ground. The incident, which was the focus of the Oscar-nominated HBO documentary Traffic Stop, was highly traumatic for King. But because she "wasn't seriously injured," Just Liberty says, "her arrest, while disturbing, would not have been included in this data."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
There's something lacking: What exactly were the arrests for? I understand the stop was for an alleged (probably pretextual) traffic stop. What were the actual arrests for? Resisting arrest, contempt of cop, driving while black? Drugs? Drunk? Warrants? Expired license?
Exactly, what were the drivers being arrested for? Something tells me it wasn't for what ever they were pulled over for. Just watch LivePD, pulled over for no signal - oh look here, you have crack.
I don't condone how the police handle this at all, they (in general) seem way to quick to get very aggressive.
According to the article, this analysis was limited to "arrests for Class C misdemeanors". In other words, not only were they pulled over for a traffic violation, that's what they were charged with. If I'm reading their methodology correctly, your "pulled over for no signal - here's crack" scenario would have been excluded from the data.
Yep, the "Class C" just faded from my brain. Still makes me wonder what the actual charges are.
>>>A new report finds that such arrests are most common in Waco,
McClennan County looooves to arrest people
>>>while resulting injuries are most common in Houston.
don't. drive. in. Houston. like Russian Roulette on wheels.
Yeah ask the 100+ bikers who got arrested.
In Traffic Stop, the woman didn't handle being stopped very well. And the cop didn't handle her not handling it very well. Probably either of them could have de-escalated the situation but didn't. If the cop had been more patient, he might have talked her down and avoided the escalation.
[…] Read the entire article at Reason. […]
[…] requires reporting on traffic stops by state and local law enforcement agencies, and recent data indicate that around 45,000 Texas drivers are arrested each year for minor traffic violations. A bill […]
[…] reporting on traffic stops by state and local law enforcement agencies, and recent data indicate that around 45,000 Texas drivers are arrested each year for minor traffic violations. A bill […]
[…] reporting on traffic stops by state and local law enforcement agencies, and recent data indicate that around 45,000 Texas drivers are arrested each year for minor traffic violations. A bill […]
[…] reporting on traffic stops by state and local law enforcement agencies, and recent data indicate that around 45,000 Texas drivers are arrested each year for minor traffic violations. A bill […]
I don’t condone how the police handle this at all, they (in general) seem way to quick to get very aggressive.https://www.jcsuitsoutlet.com/jewelry/earrings.html