Current:Home > NewsPolice officer holds innocent family at gunpoint after making typo while running plates -Excel Wealth Summit
Police officer holds innocent family at gunpoint after making typo while running plates
View
Date:2025-04-13 19:18:59
FRISCO, Texas (AP) — A Texas police department is reviewing errors made by officers who pulled over what they wrongly suspected was a stolen car and then held an innocent Black family at gunpoint.
The car’s driver, her husband and one of the two children being driven by the Arkansas couple to a youth basketball tournament can all be heard sobbing on body camera video that police in Frisco, Texas, posted online. Frisco is part of the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area.
“We made a mistake,” Police Chief David Shilson said in a statement. “Our department will not hide from its mistakes. Instead, we will learn from them.”
The video shows an officer pointing his handgun toward the Dodge Charger as he orders the car’s driver to get out and walk backward toward officers with her hands raised. Also in the car were the woman’s husband, their son and a nephew.
Police order one of the children to step out and lift his shirt. The driver’s husband and the other child are told to stay inside and raise their hands through the open windows.
“I’ve never been in trouble a day of my life,” the pleading driver says on the video. “This is scaring the hell out of me.”
Frisco police acknowledged the traffic stop was caused by an officer misreading the car’s license plate. As she saw it leaving a hotel in the city north of Dallas, the officer checked its license plate number as an Arizona tag. The car had an Arkansas license plate.
The officer who initiated the traffic stop told the driver she was pulled over because her license plate was “associated essentially with no vehicle.”
“Normally, when we see things like this, it makes us believe the vehicle was stolen,” the officer tells the crying woman on the body camera video.
Frisco police said in their statement Friday that all the department’s officers have received guidance stressing the need for accuracy when reporting information. The department said its review will aim to “identify further changes to training, policies and procedures” to prevent future mistakes.
A Frisco police spokesman, officer Joshua Lovell, said the department had no further comment Tuesday, citing the ongoing police review of the traffic stop. He declined to provide a copy of the police incident report to The Associated Press, a formal records request would have to be filed.
On the body camera video released from the July 23 traffic stop, tensions are heightened briefly when the driver tells police she has a gun locked in her car’s glove compartment.
“Occupants of the car, leave your hands outside the car. We know there is a gun in there,” one of the officers holding a handgun shouts at the passengers. “If you reach in that car, you may get shot.”
More than seven minutes pass before officers on the scene holster their weapons after recognizing their mistake and approach the car.
One of the children keeps his hands on the back of the car as the driver’s husband gets out, telling the officers they’re travelers from Arkansas and had just finished breakfast before their car was stopped.
“Listen, bro, we’re just here for a basketball tournament,” the sobbing man tells the officers. One of the children can also be heard crying as the man adds: “Y’all pulled a gun on my son for no reason.”
The officers apologize repeatedly, with one saying they responded with guns drawn because it’s “the normal way we pull people out of a stolen car.” Another assures the family that they were in no danger because they followed the officers’ orders.
“Y’all cooperate, nothing’s going to happen,” the officer says. “No one just randomly shoots somebody for no reason, right?”
The officer who initiated the stop explains that when she checked the license plate, “I ran it as AZ for Arizona instead of AR” for Arkansas.
“This is all my fault, OK,” the officer says. “I apologize for this. I know it’s very traumatic for you, your nephew and your son. Like I said, it’s on me.”
The driver’s husband is visibly shaken after police explain what happened.
He says that he dropped his phone after the car was pulled over. “If I would have went to reach for my phone, we could’ve all got killed.”
The man then turns away from the officers, walks to the passenger side of the car and bows his head, sobbing loudly.
veryGood! (4112)
Related
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Kerry Washington, Martin Sheen call for union solidarity during actors strike rally
- Dollar Tree agrees to OSHA terms to improve worker safety at 10,000 locations
- Titans rookie Tyjae Spears leads this season's all-sleeper fantasy football team
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Over 22,000 targeted by Ameritech Financial student loan forgiveness scam to get refunds
- UPS workers ratify new five-year contract, eliminating strike risk
- Elon Musk spars with actor James Woods over X's blocking feature
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- The painful pandemic lessons Mandy Cohen carries to the CDC
Ranking
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- NBA’s Jimmy Butler and singer Sebastián Yatra play tennis at a US Open charity event for Ukraine
- North Carolina unveils its first park honoring African American history
- Feds fine ship company $2 million for dumping oil and garbage into ocean off U.S. coast
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Sexual violence: Spanish soccer chief kisses Women's World Cup star on the mouth without consent
- Bear attacks 7-year-old boy in his suburban New York backyard
- Russian mercenary boss Yevgeny Prigozhin challenged the Kremlin in a brief mutiny
Recommendation
From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
'Floodwater up to 3 feet high' Grand Canyon flooding forces evacuations, knocks out power
California may pay unemployment to striking workers. But the fund to cover it is already insolvent
Vanessa Bryant Sends Message to Late Husband Kobe Bryant on What Would've Been His 45th Birthday
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Maple Leafs' Auston Matthews gets four-year extension that makes him NHL's top-paid player
Big Pennsylvania state employee unions ratify new 4-year agreements with Shapiro administration
Taylor Swift teases haunting re-recorded 'Look What You Made Me Do' in 'Wilderness' trailer