This Alabama Town's Shakedowns Are So Egregious That the Justice Department Is Backing a Suit Against It
Brookside faces several federal challenges for trying to fund its city by ticketing and towing the cars of anybody they can get away with.

The Department of Justice has submitted a letter expressing interest and support in a class-action lawsuit against a small Alabama town that drew national attention for turning to shady police stops and fines to jack up municipal revenue by more than 600 percent in two years.
When we last took note of Brookside, Alabama, a town of 1,500 people north of Birmingham, Police Chief Mike Jones had just stepped down following Birmingham News reports showing he, the mayor, and the police had embarked on a plan to bankroll Brookside by stopping and fining as many travelers as they possibly could. By 2020, half of the city's $1.2 million revenue was coming entirely from fines and forfeitures, and then that money was being used to pay for the police department's growth.
Brookside was facing a pack of federal lawsuits from citizens who claimed police were fabricating charges to force people to pay thousands of dollars in fines and seizing their vehicles. In April, the Institute for Justice (IJ) filed a class-action complaint against Brookside, some of its police officers, and the towing company that the police were using to seize people's cars. IJ is representing plaintiff Brittany Coleman (and three others), who says she was pulled over for following her boyfriend's car too closely and also cited for marijuana possession, a charge that was dropped later because the police didn't actually find any marijuana. Nevertheless, they had her car towed, and she had to pay close to $1,000 to get it back.
The lawsuit, in the U.S. District Court of the Northern District of Alabama, Southern Division, seeks to have the town's practices declared an unconstitutional violation of the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment, an injunction forcing the towing company to return people's vehicles and any fees they've paid, and, obviously, an end to the whole scheme.
The town's money-grubbing seems to have collapsed amid the media attention and lawsuits. In late April, the Birmingham News published a deeply researched piece on the police department's misconduct. By then the chief had quit, as had half of the town's police force. The mayor pulled the police off the nearby interstate, and a state audit had outlined "missing guns, poor financial practices and shoddy storage of evidence, including an unmarked trash bag filled with prescription medicines that did not seem to be associated with any particular case."
On Tuesday, Carla C. Ward, an assistant U.S. attorney for the U.S. Attorney's Office of the Northern District of Alabama, sent in a friendly "statement of interest" supporting IJ's lawsuit and encouraging the court to allow it to proceed in response to Brookside filing a motion to try to get the lawsuit dismissed. The letter notes the severe conflict of interest of the town so heavily depending on fines and forfeitures to fund the very police officers who are pulling people over:
Judges should not profit from their decisions in cases. Nor should funding for prosecutors or police officers depend substantially on unnecessarily aggressive law enforcement aimed at generating income through fines and fees. Criminal justice systems tainted by these unreasonable incentives stand to punish the poor for their poverty and put law enforcement at odds with the communities they are meant to serve.
The letter notes that pay for both the town's prosecutor and the municipal judge in Brookside dramatically jumped during these years of increased enforcement.
"The Justice Department's statement recognizes that Brookside's abusive system of policing for profit violates the Constitution, and that the town should be held accountable," IJ Attorney Jaba Tsitsuashvili said in a prepared statement. "No one should live in fear of being ticketed, fined, or having their car towed for the sake of raising police revenue."
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The proper remedies are to trade the power of the state, err town but you know what I mean, for victim prosecution, and to hold losing prosecutors liable for all costs. Typical statist reaction to just put on their shocked face and collect their take anyway.
I think that tar and feathers are an entirely appropriate remedy in this situation. As I've often said, you'd only need to do it to a handful of these motherfuckers every year to make many more think twice.
-jcr
Here is where things get tricky, given the doj is a compleatly political entity are they also going to crack down on cities like Chicago that have a secondary court system for fines that operates on a fytw basis?
And can we believe a single thing that comes from the doj?
The alabam town is probably compleatly corrupt, but I am not taking the doj's word on it
They're probably just some good-old-boys, never meaning no harm.
I thought Boss Hogg was the corrupt one.
Them ol' Duke boys were the ones always gettin' caught in Roscoe's speed traps or stumblin' on ta Boss's hijinks. Not the folks who ran the town.
It takes a good government with guns to stop a bad government with guns, but there's no such thing as a good government.
The authors of the Constitution knew this and built in two partial solutions: limited government powers and division of powers. But our politicians have been pulling off a slow coup ever since with collusion between the branches and levels of government and by appointing judges and civil servants willing to ignore the Constitution's limitations on government.
This _one_ time, separation of powers seems to be working, so save your complaints for when they go back to business as usual.
Haven't these poor folks already suffered enough government intervention in their lives?
Like this doesn't happen all over the country.
Keep sucking that totalitarian dick, Scott.
The fucking justice department.
LOL
Die, groomer.
What the fuck is wrong with you, you flea-brained, saggy-titted, twat? Every comment from this fucking dweeb has me fantasizing about his teeth on the edge of a curb - but he'd have actually leave his computer screen for that to happen. Yes, the Justice Department, STANDING UP FOR INDIVIDUAL LIBERTIES - you pusbrained faggot.
Doesn't everyone see that the Democrats came up with Defund the Police, calling it a problem of systemic racism, simply because they hire, train and manage the police in the big blue cities exactly the way they want the police to behave. It's nothing more than a distraction from their management of the police. This seems to clear to me, but it seems no one says it.
This case is no different, and appears to centered around Mike Jones, the chief of police. I was unable to find what party he's affiliated with. But he was on the Helena City Council before taking the chief of police job, plus he has a business providing security at major events. But he also got sued for not paying his bills. It's the political class, vs. what they look at as cows to milk - the rest of us that actually work.
It’s not the Dems who have the cozy relationship with law enforcement unions. This is what you get when you blindly “back the blue”. Policing for profit is a nation-wide problem, not something you only see in cities run by the other guys.
It was always crazy to see people like Ted Wheeler try to join in with the protests, when the protests were against him and his shitty police force.
Not all of us can hate cops as much as Republicans, who injured 150 of them in one day last year.
Look for this town and many others to go the Speed/red light camera route. No profiling. The insurance company owns the cameras and does the paperwork. Pay the fine and no points- but the insurance company gets to raise your rate. Oh- they like to shorten the yellows to ensure plenty of donations.
A lot of towns/cities have given up on the red light/speed cameras. The private companies that ran them promised all sorts of big revenues to the towns/cities, but those revenues never materialized and the private companies pocketed huge profits.
Meanwhile, the local governments were getting tons of complaints from their voters with none of the riches to show for it, so the politicians, still out of sheer self-interest and not a shred of concern for actual justice, got rid of the red light and speed cameras.
Basically, they did the cost-benefit analysis to their own political careers and chose to remain in power by getting rid of the cameras.
The problem with red light camera scheme for a small town is that they cannot exempt their own residents from it, nor use it to collect revenue from the strangers speeding by on the interstate.
But can they put speed cameras on the interstate?
...a small Alabama town that drew national attention for turning to shady police stops...
If only. Cops in these kinds of places always pulled me over in the most open, hottest spots available...
Not only should the town be held accountable. Every individual involved should spend time in jail and have his or her finances ruined. Quite frankly, when I saw the story. My first thought was Dothan. I have seen some videos of their cops in action. Avoid that town.
I'll do you one better and avoid the entire damn state.
Part of the punishment portion of this action needs to be to revoke whatever Municipal Charter these crooks with robes and badges are operating under.
Good luck holding anyone accountable. Cops, prosecutors and judges are untouchable. They won’t forfeit a single dime or suffer any meaningful consequences on a personal level. The tax-payers and victims will foot the bill as always.
Actually I am all for this type of ticketing but it has to be real. I live off a street where the speed limit is 35 and people do 60 on it, not a cop in sight.
Since most car crashes involve speeding these days I am for enforcing the speed limit.
BUT with-in REASON.
Don't ticket at the bottom of hills, in stretches' where there are no drive ways, cross streets, but where speeding might hurt ot kill people and people should not be doing over 15 MPH on the Highway, here they do 30 over, 90 miles an hour.
Gee, what could go wrong?
I primarily am on two wheels on my motorcycle and a car passing me at twice the speed limit can startle me...
Easy fix though, you just put snipers on the road. Shot a few speeders and the problem would solve it's self. We should do the same at the border.
You're going about this entirely the wrong way.
The easy and proper and just way to fix the problem of speeding is to redesign the road so that people don't speed.
Here are a few ways to do this:
a) Speed bumps; cheap, easy to install. Deters speeding and also people from doing donuts late at night. Downside is that they are annoying to the locals, but the locals are the ones that benefit by getting much safer speeds.
b) Narrow the road by removing lanes. this can be done permanently or temporarily. They even have movable barricades that can be moved at different times of day to accommodate different traffic at different hours (this won't be economical except for large thoroughfares).
c) Introduce curves. Again, this can be done with temporary or permanent barricades.
d) Add roundabouts. Where I live there is a tiny roundabout. It serves as a method of slowing traffic without using a 4-way stop.
e) Add lots of little bumps/cuts in the road surface. Making the road less smooth deters speeding.
Traffic engineers have tested all of these solutions and know the pros and cons and have plenty of statistics to back it up.
But cities love ticket revenues, so they always choose that instead of methods that cost money, don't generate revenue, and actually stop speeding.
Good common sense. Traffic "calming" has been successful for decades. Traffic circles replacing "four ways stop" intersections actually worked very well in my city when it was implemented a few years ago at high traffic locations.
All four way stops should be roundabouts.
Several months ago Reason published an article concerning the policing practices of several southern towns including Florida. Some of the towns police departments were so corrupt and self serving, they were disbanded over threats the town would be disincorporated in fact one or two towns were.
However towns up north are no different. Several years ago, Charlevoix, Mi. in a statement through the local press, that more than a million dollars were collected from traffic fines alone. keep in mind this is not your average town, when during summer months is the playground for the wealthy and including pop stars.
There;s a lot of money floating around the area during the summer.
This is just a witch hunt. Senators daughter got hassled and the FBI attacked.
If Carla C. Ward is a woman I will kiss your foot.
The South has all these pathologies in part because the South never really stopped being authoritarian. It's always been just another shithole country. It was born in a context of masters and slaves, and its people never really wrapped their heads around democracy, since democracy means the slaves get to rule the masters, which is apparently the most terrifying thought in American history.
Once you rationalize your own authoritarian rule, you can rationalize pretty much anything. Harassing passersby for loot is child's play compared to disenfranchising 30% of your population.
Yes, it's a tragedy that the North's 'victory' in the Civil War has just provided cover for the South to behave in vile and reprehensible ways ever since. There's no doubt an independent south would be an international pariah, rogue state, haven for terrorism, etc - or would long ago have been forced to become a modern, democratic, liberal nation.