Cops Arrested Him for a Fictitious Traffic Violation Because He Flipped Them Off
A federal judge allowed a lawsuit against the officers to proceed, finding evidence of several constitutional violations.

On a Friday night in July 2018, Des Moines police officers Ryan Steinkamp and Brian Minnehan saw Domeco Fugenschuh, a 22-year-old black man, driving west on Hickman Road. Steinkamp and Minnehan, both white, were assigned to a "special enforcement team" focused on illegal guns, drugs, and gang activity. They had no reason to believe Fugenschuh was involved with any of that, but they decided to follow him anyway because he "sat up slightly" and "turned his head to stare at the officers" as he passed them.
After the cops followed Fugenschuh for several blocks, he expressed his irritation at the unjustified attention by giving them the finger. Steinkamp and Minnehan did not like that, so they continued following Fugenschuh and pulled him over for an invented traffic violation. During the stop, the officers handcuffed Fugenschuh, roughed him up, searched his car, and arrested him for the alleged traffic infraction. They also charged him with marijuana possession after the car search turned up a bit of pot and a portable phone charger that they mistakenly thought was a digital scale.
When Fugenschuh sued Steinkamp and Minnehan for a litany of constitutional violations, they argued that they were shielded by qualified immunity, which bars federal civil rights claims against government officials unless their alleged misconduct violated "clearly established" law. Last Saturday, U.S. Chief Magistrate Judge Helen C. Adams rejected that defense, ruling that a jury should hear Fugenschuh's allegations because it might reasonably conclude that Steinkamp and Minnehan ignored constraints that should be familiar to every police officer in the country.
The decision was a small victory for civil liberties, and the abuses that Fugenschuh suffered pale beside the sort of outrageous police conduct that tends to attract national attention. But this run-of-the-mill case nicely illustrates the wide discretion that the Supreme Court has given police officers to harass motorists for no good reason—leeway that cops nevertheless manage to exceed on a regular basis.
The facts of the traffic stop are mostly undisputed, conceded by the officers and/or verified by dash and body camera footage. Steinkamp and Minnehan pulled Fugenschuh over after he stopped at a red light, signaled a right turn, and turned onto 30th Street. When Steinkamp approached Fugenschuh's car, he initially refused to explain the justification for the stop. Instead he ordered Fugenschuh out of the car and handcuffed him.
After Fugenschuh "asked numerous times why he was stopped," Steinkamp claimed Fugenschuh had "cut off" a car that was moving north on 30th Street, as evidenced by the fact that the driver had applied his brakes. Fugenschuh disputed that account, which apparently irked Steinkamp, who "proceeded to bend Fugenschuh over the hood of the patrol car," "pull his handcuffed arms up above his body," and push his face into the hood of the car.
While frisking Fugenschuh, Steinkamp asked if he had insurance, at which point Fugenschuh began cursing at the cops. "You're going to jail now," Steinkamp responded.
Steinkamp "pulled Fugenschuh off the hood of the patrol car and walked him to the door of the patrol car as Fugenschuh continued to curse at the officers," Adams notes. "Minnehan opened the patrol car door and told Fugenschuh to 'have a seat.' Less than one second after Minnehan told Fugenschuh to have a seat, Steinkamp shoved Fugenschuh into the back of the patrol car, telling him to 'get in the car.' Fugenschuh fell, hitting his head on the patrol car and landing on his handcuffed wrists. Steinkamp's body-worn camera footage shows Fugenschuh complaining of pain and the officers ordering Fugenschuh to 'get up' and 'sit in the car' repeatedly to which Fugenschuh responded, 'give me a second' and 'I can't.' Fugenschuh continued to make noises of discomfort while sitting in the patrol car with his legs out of the vehicle. The officers continued to ask Fugenschuh to 'get in the car' until Fugenschuh pulled his feet into the patrol car."
Inside the patrol car, Steinkamp told Fugenschuh, "We don't care about this petty crap. We don't deal with that crap, but when you act the way you acted from the get-go, when we were sitting there and you looked at us, like, real hard and start[ed] flipping us off…" Steinkamp evidently did not finish the thought, perhaps because he realized that flipping cops off, arguing with them, and speaking harshly to them are not crimes. Perhaps he also realized (although this might be giving him too much credit) that admitting he acted out of personal pique would support a claim that he retaliated against Fugenschuh for constitutionally protected speech.
At this point, Minnehan searched Fugenschuh's car. According to Fugenschuh's original complaint, which he filed in state court before the case was transferred to federal court in July 2020, the cops "falsely alleged that they smelled marijuana to justify the search."
Although the officers' misidentification of Fugenschuh's phone charger as a digital scale suggests they initially thought they had nabbed a pot dealer, he was charged only with possession. According to Fugenschuh's complaint, Minnehan "specifically noted that he doesn't usually take people to jail for marijuana possession." Prosecutors dropped that charge in October 2018.
As for the purported traffic offense, the cops initially charged Fugenschuh with violating Section 321.311 of the Iowa Code, which says "the approach for a right turn and right turn shall be made as close as practical to the right-hand curb or edge of the roadway." During Fugenschuh's trial, the prosecutor, after realizing that provision did not fit the conduct that Steinkamp and Minnehan supposedly observed, "amended the initial charge." The prosecutor changed the charge to a violation of Section 321.322(1), which says a driver making a turn "shall yield the right-of-way to any vehicle on the intersecting roadway which has entered the intersection or which is approaching so closely as to constitute an immediate hazard during the time the driver is moving across or within the intersection."
Fugenschuh, who was representing himself, wanted to present video of the stop, which he said would show he was not guilty of that charge. But he "was informed that because the prosecution had not presented the video as evidence, the video was unavailable." After Fugenschuh was convicted, he got access to the video, which he used to challenge his conviction.
During the post-conviction trial, Minnehan "testified he was unaware what the initial charge under Iowa Code § 321.311 criminalized." Steinkamp conceded that "Fugenschuh had not violated" that provision. And after viewing the video, a judge concluded that Fugenschuh was not guilty of the substitute charge either.
"The video demonstrates there was no actual danger or near collision or immediate hazard," the judge said. "Fugenschuh was out of the intersection before the Second Car entered it and the cars were never very close to each other, demonstrating the Second Car was not 'approaching so closely as to constitute an immediate hazard during the time [Fugenschuh] was moving across or within the intersection.'"
To sum up, the evidence suggests that Steinkamp and Minnehan followed Fugenschuh for no good reason, decided to pull him over because they got the finger, and manufactured an excuse to do that based on a claim that was contradicted by the video footage. They immediately ordered him out of the car and handcuffed him, which is not standard procedure for a routine traffic violation (even a real one), and had already decided to arrest him because of his attitude before they found the pot that led to the possession charge. And that search was based on an unverifiable claim about what the officers' noses supposedly detected.
According to Fugenschuh, Minnehan admitted that he would not typically take someone into custody for low-level marijuana possession, let alone a minor traffic violation. Steinkamp's recorded comments and his rough treatment of Fugenschuh, who was handcuffed and not offering any physical resistance or posing any plausible threat, reinforce the impression that the officer lost his temper because he perceived Fugenschuh as disrespecting his authority.
This evidence, Adams concluded, made several of Fugenschuh's claims plausible. He will be allowed to argue that Steinkamp and Minnehan violated his Fourth Amendment rights when they "unreasonably seized him by detaining him for a non-existent turning violation"; that Steinkamp used excessive force, another Fourth Amendment violation, when he "shoved Fugenschuh onto the hood of the car and pushed Fugenschuh after Minnehan had commanded Fugenschuh to get into the patrol car"; and that the same actions qualified as assault and battery under Iowa law. Adams also allowed Fugenschuh to pursue a First Amendment claim: that Steinkamp and Minnehan punished him for constitutionally protected speech.
Fugenschuh is by no means guaranteed victory on any of these claims. Adams found that they hinge on "disputed questions of material fact" and noted evidence that the officers might cite to rebut them. But based on the existing record, it certainly looks like Steinkamp and Minnehan crossed several legal lines.
Although the Supreme Court drew those lines, its decisions also have encouraged the sort of behavior described in Fugenschuh's lawsuit. His complaint alleges that Des Moines police officers "pretextually stop motorists on a regular basis." According to the Supreme Court's 1996 ruling in Whren v. United States, there is nothing unconstitutional about that: Police may stop a driver whenever they "have probable cause to believe that a traffic violation has occurred," even when the true motive is finding evidence of an unrelated crime.
Because state traffic codes include myriad rules governing the maintenance and operation of motor vehicles, many of which are picayune, arbitrary, obscure, or ambiguous, that rule allows cops to stop pretty much any car they want. And they have a strong motive to use that power. Pretextual traffic stops not only allow cops to seize contraband and make arrests; they present an opportunity to commit roadside robbery by seizing money under civil forfeiture laws. Since that money is used to pad police budgets, cops have a financial incentive to stop first and ask questions later.
Police officers, of course, are not supposed to invent traffic violations out of whole cloth. But when a cop claims someone committed a traffic violation, his word will generally prevail unless there is independent evidence that contradicts it. That is what happened in this case, until Fugenschuh managed to obtain the video that persuaded a judge he had not done what Steinkamp and Minnehan claimed.
Even when a driver actually commits a minor traffic violation (which, again, is hard to avoid, given how many rules there are to break), why would a cop order him out of his car and handcuff him? In this case, it's pretty clear why: Steinkamp and Minnehan were mad because Fugenschuh "started flipping us off," even though courts have held that such gestures are constitutionally protected. But Steinkamp and Minnehan did not need any particular reason. In the 1977 case Pennsylvania v. Mimms, the Supreme Court said cops may order legally detained motorists out of their cars at will, based on general concerns about officer safety. Two decades later, the Court extended that rule from drivers to passengers in Maryland v. Wilson. Once Steinkamp and Minnehan had taken Fugenschuh into custody, frisking him also was legally authorized based on the same general concerns.
Why was Fugenschuh arrested? Again, we know why, based on Steinkamp's own words. But Steinkamp had the power to punish Fugenschuh for his disrespect because the Supreme Court has approved custodial arrests for minor traffic offenses, even when they are not punishable by jail.
What about the car search? Since 1925, the Supreme Court has recognized a "vehicle exception" to the Fourth Amendment's general search warrant requirement. The rationale in that case, Carroll v. United States, was that police who suspect a vehicle contains contraband cannot reasonably be expected to obtain a warrant, given that the vehicle could easily be moved during the time that would take. Although the availability of electronic warrants undermines that rationale, we are stuck with a rule that was inspired by the challenges of enforcing alcohol prohibition in the 1920s.
Officially, police still need probable cause to search a vehicle. But probable cause is easily manufactured in this context. As this case illustrates, the purported odor of marijuana, whether real, imagined, or invented, suffices—at least in jurisdictions where that drug remains illegal. A purported "alert" by a drug-sniffing dog, whether real, imagined, or invented, likewise will do the trick. So in practice, police not only have the power to stop any car they want; they also have the power to search it.
None of this means that what Steinkamp and Minnehan did in this particular situation was legal. To the contrary, Adams found credible evidence that it was not. But the existing rules invite fudging, which in many cases won't be officially recognized because the arrestee does not file a lawsuit or successfully challenge a conviction. When the Supreme Court gives cops a mile, they are bound to take an extra inch.
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Domeco Fugenschuh, a 22-year-old black man, driving west on Hickman Road. Steinkamp and Minnehan, both white, were assigned to a "special enforcement team" focused on illegal guns, drugs, and gang activity.
Ok, the cops were white. Relevance?
Because that meant that Fugenschuh was guilty of being uppity - which we know was the real underlying offence - and that is only an offence when the complainant is white.
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You're right--we must hide the races of everyone involved just in case someone misconstrues the abuse of black people by white people as evidence that racism still exists, which, of course, just couldn't be true. After all, how could it be true when you're suppressing the evidence as hard as you can?
So then when a white cop pulls over a white guy and goes gestapo (like the other Reason piece published today), what kind of racism is that?
Let's go through this logically. Racism is bad. Abuse by police is bad. Either of these things independently is bad. We don't need to pretend that all abusive policing is racism. It doesn't have to be both racist and abusive to be bad. But what's the sense in denying that one of them exists if it does, or may, be a factor in a particular case?
Because if they were Asian they would have been too smart to fuck up like that.
Discrimination,of course....
Yay?
You have to be an absolute moron to flip off cops. Why would you do that?
You have to be an absolute moron to think that being flipped off gives you the excuse to abuse others. Why would you do that?
Fugenschuh may not have made the ideal decision in the heat of the moment but based on the story above (which is apparently confirmed by the judge), he was provoked. His misjudgement is trivial compared to the abuses of these to should-be-ex-cops.
And most cops are absolute morons, but they're morons with thin skin, a hard-on for violence, and the legal authority to get away with an awful lot of bullshit.
So no, it's not illegal to flip off the cops, but you're not doing yourself any favors.
Are you saying violence is an of itself illegals?
Even when it's exercised by cop-killers and claimed as self-defense?
Is giving the finger to another driver illegal? If not why should cops be treated differently than other people?
Because other people don't have the authority to pull you over.
A hot chick has the right and should have the ability to walk naked down Main Street and not get assaulted. But we don't live in that world, or the one where flipping off pigs is a good idea either.
I never said it was a good idea. It's not a good idea to flip any driver off. Unless they are in an electric car. Then it's your duty as a red blooded American.
You never know when the old lady you flip off decides she had enough and lived long enough and does her level best to run you off the road for flipping her off. Stranger things have happened. So it's not the best idea.
However, my point is there is no legal reason you can't. And there should not be any legal reason you can't. Just like you should be able to call a bunch of black gang types a bunch of lazy niggers. Legally speaking. It's not a smart decision but after they kill you it's still murder. We don't say, "Well, he flipped you off! I see. Then you were justified in curb stomping his testicles until he died of shock."
I didn't say that you said it was a good idea, but rather you asked "why cops should be treated any differently" than anyone else if flipping off other people isn't illegal.
And thus, I explained why cops should be treated differently than the average driver when it comes to gesturing one's discontent with their middle finger. Because even if you win the court case after they stomp on your testicles, you still got your testicles stomped on, and it's not in any way guaranteed that you'll win the court case. Because pigs get away with murder.
Pakistan's ex-PM and now political-dissident Capt Imran Khan, is that you?
Careful!
Neoliberal Beltway neolib journalist Mr Jonathan Swan is gonna make you start counting your affairs in previous lives to dare even suggesting that “hot chick walking down the Main Street” is likely to get sexually assaulted. He would go: "You were hot and you even posed for cameras! Quite rich of you to not get assaulted and say *that*."
It's true. Copps are pussies who can't take the slightest indication that you don't worship the ground the walk on, so they use illegal arrests and bullets to get even. I'd never flip off a cop. To do so requires a foolish assumption that they have a tiny bit of self-control and a passing knowledge of the constitution, which in most cases isn't true.
Some people don't like police states.
You can't have a police state without police.
And you can't have a state without borders.
He redundantly proved he was an uppity negro by doing so! Didn't know why he needed to, given what he had done already. That's why “redundantly”.
True,but stupidity is not a crime.
From the article it sounds like the driver was being harassed by the officers (should be formerly officers). The officers should not have been harassing the driver in the first place, however the driver flipping the officers off, while legal was not very smart.
Via the behavior and actions of the officers they became criminals and should be prosecuted in addition to being held accountable in civil court. Police offices are granted authority to utilize force, however with this they should be held to a higher standard. If they fail to uphold the basics of civility and fabricate violations to punish a citizen who bruised their egos, the should no longer be officers and should be held liable,
Race really should not be a factor, although I recognize that society is sensitive to racial issues. For me its a simple expectation to be treated fairly by police officers and not to fabricate evidence.
Your "simple expectation" is a fantasy.
Black men aged 18-35 comprise 6% of the population and commit 54% of violent crimes, including murder and rape. Is it your "simple expectation" that there is any tolerable way to live with these people?
Jefferson was right when he said that the enmity between the races will not end until one race exterminates the other. Unfortunately, white progressives (among whom I count libertarians) cannot countenance this truth.
Hmm...ordinary people detaining other people and roughing them up without any basis is called kidnapping and assault. Great that the lawsuit proceeds, but these bastards should be criminally prosecuted. If you're not following the law, then being law enforcement shouldn't protect you from the full consequences of your actions.
Yes, let's continue to harrass the police that have to deal with scum like this guy every day.
Because society would be so much better off if fewer people were willing to do police work. That way, when another black man overdoses on fentanyl while resisting arrest, the ensuing riots can destroy public and private property without any danger of police "brutality" getting in the way.
The anti-police view is a sufficient reductio of the libertarian view. Libertarianism is nonsense. It's even nonsense in economics, but when it comes to policing, immigration etc., it's absolute nonsense, plain childish silliness.
Having someone doing the job wrong, is arguable more dangerous than having no one do it at all. If a thug murders you, at least there is hope for justice. If a cop murders you, well he'll get off on immunity, collect his pension your taxes paid for, and live happily ever after. Congrats, you just paid your own murderer.
Mr. Fugenschuh should probably find somewhere else to live, since the cops in Des Moines are going to be on the lookout for him.
He deserves to have his life destroyed!
South Park® taught me that.
Liberia or Ghana will give him citizenship.
I'll buy his one-way plane ticket if you'll cover the visa fees.
Let's be rid of these people, once and for all. There is no tolerable way to live with them.
And nothing else happened
Remember it's only a few bad apples. And the good apples have to defend the bad apples, or the oranges will get the wrong impression of ALL the apples, instead of a few apples.
The real "bad apples" all qualify for citizenship in Liberia.
And that, continuing the project of Marcus Garvey, is where we should send them.
ALL of them.
"But he "was informed that because the prosecution had not presented the video as evidence, the video was unavailable.""
And the prosecutor and judge were also sued, right? Oh right, complete immunity, because that's a good idea.
The prosecutor had an obligation to turn over all evidence. The judge had an obligation to make the prosecutor do so. Immunity for failure to follow these obligations is nonsense.
Ohh..
So they not just stopped, but duly charged him for his uppity [mis]conduct?
God Bless America!
Couldn't have found a more literal instance of: Policing.
They policed him hard. Excellent!
Reason®: A nice way to say `selfishness`.
#BackTheBlue°
If by "America" you mean the degenerate progressive empire that has existed on the continent of North America since about 1860, while retaining the title and regalia of the original republic, I don't think anyone cares about that polity anymore.
Even the MAGA folks don't think America can be made "great again." People are waking up. The real question is not who will run America, but instead: What will come after?
The only take-away from this biased article is that our police are exhausted mentally and physically by those purported “citizens” who are eager to degrade the moral integrity of our nation. Our laws frequently endorse and protect behaviors that are directly detrimental to the stability and success of any and all societies. So be it. It then falls upon the individual to conform, yes conform, to the moral implications of such laws, and not to abuse them.
The upshot of the last few paragraphs indicates that Fugenschuh got what he asked for, a messy situation predicated by his questionable action.
By the way, I see nowhere after the first two sentences of identifying each individual by their racial identity, is there any judicial argument of racism being involved in the proceedings. Are there? If not, it does seem we have identified at least one possible racist.