Virginia Man Faces 12 Months in Jail, $2,500 Fine for Drawing a Crosswalk With Chalk
After Charlottesville city officials ignored residents’ demand for a painted crosswalk in a popular intersection, a pedestrian safety advocate made his own.

After the city of Charlottesville, Virginia, denied requests to paint crosswalk lines at an intersection popular among pedestrians, Kevin Cox, a retired crossing guard, decided to take matters into his own hands by placing spray chalk lines in the shape of a crosswalk. He's since been charged with intentional destruction of property, a Class I misdemeanor, and faces a sentence of up to 12 months in jail and a fine of up to $2,500.
Cox's temporary crosswalk was placed at the intersection of Elliott Avenue and Second Street, which is often used by pedestrians visiting the Ix Art Park but does not have any painted crosswalk lines. Although 900 residents petitioned in October 2024 for a crosswalk to enhance safety following a fatal pedestrian-car crash at a nearby intersection, city officials responded by saying that pedestrians should cross at either First Street or Sixth Street, roughly 400 or 500 feet away, respectively, where painted crosswalks already exist.
Irritated by the city's inaction, Cox, an outspoken pedestrian advocate, placed his chalk lines in May 2025. "There is a marked crosswalk now at Second Street and Elliot Avenue in spite of you," he told the city manager, Sam Sanders, in an email sent that same day. "It's chalk, not paint. Please replace it with a real one," reported 29News, a local NBC affiliate.
Police said they couldn't determine if the lines were permanent paint, according to the police report Cox shared with 29News, leading the city to cover them with black paint. Cox later turned himself in to the Charlottesville Police Department. "They have provoked me," Cox told 29News, "it's not going to stop me."
Pedestrian fatalities hit a 40-year high in 2022, increasing by 50 percent from 1.55 to 2.33 per 100,000 population since 2013. While there are several contributing factors, including larger vehicles with impaired visibility and high-speed roadways, some blame distracted driving. This has led 31 states to pass laws prohibiting device usage while driving since 2010.
Other government solutions range from the innocuous, like increased lighting at intersections, to the more controversial, like California's vetoed car speed alarm bill or a $48 million proposal for new federal regulations. Placing one's preferred road markings is a risky choice given the potential for increasing, rather than decreasing, overall safety.
However, the tiff between Cox and Charlottesville officials isn't about whatever destruction of property or any safety concerns the temporary chalk lines may have caused. Rather, at the heart of the dispute is the age-old tension over who has the final say on how society ought to function: so-called government experts or the people living under their policies. "This is about much more than a crosswalk," Cox told The Daily Progress. "It's about how the city excludes pedestrians and often cyclists from street planning."
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>>While there are several contributing factors
anarchy starts w/the little things. Brandon, Inc. hated the cops & made it clear so in Dallas everyone started running reds & turning left from straight lanes
Crosswalk markings won’t prevent anything.
"There is a marked crosswalk now at Second Street and Elliot Avenue in spite of you," he told the city manager, Sam Sanders, in an email sent that same day. "It's chalk, not paint. Please replace it with a real one," reported 29News, a local NBC affiliate.
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You see, Sir... you disrespected a bureaucrat, and then told him / her that you did it. That was never going to end well. Now they have to put you in your place or they will lose their sense of superiority.
He should have used rainbow colors. You democrats there would have declared it a ‘pride mural’ like my local Marxists did with some pride themed street graffiti.
which is often used by pedestrians visiting the Ix Art Park
And you lost me.
Imagine had he drawn ON a Rainbow crosswalk...
Oh, $2,500 fine and 12 months... that's a slap on the wrist:
DeSantis should preemptively pardon him.
Kevin Cox, a retired crossing guard, decided to take matters into his own hands by placing spray chalk lines in the shape of a crosswalk.
Dude, don't take your work home with you, it never ends well.
>Although 900 residents petitioned in October 2024 for a crosswalk to enhance safety following a fatal pedestrian-car crash at a nearby intersection, city officials responded by saying that pedestrians should cross at either First Street or Sixth Street, roughly 400 or 500 feet away, respectively, where painted crosswalks already exist.
OK, so . . . Autumn is here over-reacting again.
1. One pedestrian death? That's it? Sounds like pedestrians are crossing safely all the rest of the time there.
2. Yeah, the city is being an asshole here. A massive asshole. But the guy isn't blameless either. Lets all paint crosswalks across all the streets and see how that works out with people ignoring crosswalks.
3. Bruh should have chalked it in rainbow - then no one would ever be allowed to drive over it. As long as the pedestrians never stepped on the now-sacred chalk lines they'd be able to cross freely.
They did #3 in Spokane. Reason covered that.
I don’t know how to feel about the crosswalk chalker until someone tells me which political tribe he’s from. Then it’s either dismiss the charges with an apology, or add a hate crime enhancement.
Skin color is also a factor to take into consideration.
Exactly.
Crossing in crosswalks is white supremacy.
"Police said they couldn't determine if the lines were permanent paint . . . "
Even after being told it was chalk?
Why were the police making the determination?
No city engineer in a college town?
Bullshit.
Pure hissy fit for being shown up as petty bureaucrats.
Spraying the crosswalk with some water to see if it runs off was too complicated for the cops?
All they can spray is pepper spray or tear gas.
"an outspoken pedestrian advocate" Maybe if he was a very good advocate this would have went better.
My college roommate was head of an SGA committee responsible for, among other things, re-painting small Tiger Tracks on the highway leading into Auburn AL near the outskirts of town.
One night, he painted a giant 20 ft tiger paw in the middle of the famous Toomers Corner intersection downtown, and was arrested for it. They were throwing the book at him, but his dad was a prominent attorney and got it all dismissed.
A few years later, the CIty painted an even bigger one there that they maintain
His mistake was not making it a Homo-Rainbow crosswalk.
Are you really going to die on the hill of 'people can draw whatever lines and lanes they want on public roads'?
I see you're new to Reason.
We have three main rules. Use your brain. Don't parrot narrative. JSDR.
Like the lady on Steinfield?
I recall that Kramer, on Seinfeld, painted lines for an extra lane in the portion of the highway he adopted. It didn't go well.
...
If they've been driving since 2010, the problem is not distraction; they need a rest!
Do editors pay attention to word order?
Ownership of the streets, and taxes that come with that, should be as local as possible. Charlottesville government is too big.
Make it female, and make it gay.
There are two existing crosswalks within a block either way. People do not need a marked crosswalk at every gol-darned intersection.
If the cops have trouble determining if the chalk is permanent, I bet there are more difficult things they have trouble determining.