The young police officer came up to my window. I couldn’t
tell if he was Hispanic or White. He could have been a White guy with dark hair
or a light skinned Hispanic, or maybe half and half. He didn’t look any older
than 25. He asked me for my driver’s license and my insurance. I told him that
the driver’s license was in my purse and that my insurance card was in my glove
compartment. I reached for both and handed them to him.
As I reached across my father’s lap for these I noticed that
his partner had also gotten off the car and was standing next to my car on the
passenger side looking in at my 90 year old father.
I asked him puzzled what I had done wrong. First he told me
that he’d stopped me because the light was out on my license plate. Second he
told me that the reason he had noticed me and decided to follow me was because
I had flipped him off at the light back there.
I was dumbfounded now. I realized that he was the police car
that I had seen just earlier at the light facing me. So he had made a U turn
and had followed me because he thought I had flipped him off.
I was at a loss for words but I told him, “I’m not the kind
of person who would flip you off,” and not knowing what else to say at that
moment to plead my case I added, “I’m a very educated person.”
“Oh are you?” he asked in a mocking tone as he walked away
with my driver’s license and insurance.
I turned to my father and told him what the policeman had
said to me. My father was just as puzzled and surprised by the whole thing.
The policeman returned and handed me my information and I
told him I had no idea what I may have done to make him think I was flipping
him off. I explained that I speak with my hands and that maybe that’s what had
happened back there. He told me to get my light fixed and he didn’t give me a
ticket, but he left me with a really sad and uneasy feeling.
I’ve seen so many stories about people being stopped by the
police and about racial profiling. I was a Hispanic woman driving in Northside.
There are many types of people in my neighborhood. Sadly, there are the types
of people who would flip off a cop, but there are people like that everywhere,
not just here.
When I told my ex-husband about the incident he could not
stop laughing. First of all because he knows I’m not the type of person to flip
off the police. He thinks I’m one of the biggest nerds he knows. The other
reason he laughed so hard was because of the type of car that I drive. I drive
a little Honda Fit. Hardly a loud car and not the kind that usually attracts the
attention of the police. I have stickers on the back of my car supporting my
daughter’s lacrosse team and school. He asked me if I had been playing my NPR
too loud.
When my ex pointed out all these obvious things it made me
realize even more how ridiculous all this had been and it made me wonder about
the policeman’s judgment.
But in addition to how ridiculous it all was it also scared
me. I had never before in my life felt fear when being stopped by the police. Yes
sure I felt nervous like everyone else does, and I hoped they wouldn’t give me
a ticket, but there was something different about it this time. I hadn’t done
something that I knew was wrong, like running a stop sign or not coming to a
complete stop at a light. This time I was being accused of something I absolutely
did not do. I was also scared by the way his partner had also felt the need to
get out of the car for back-up. I didn’t know what they were going to do if
they really felt like I had insulted them.
I couldn’t help but wonder how they had felt when they saw
that I was a middle-aged, over-weight lacrosse mom, in a Honda Fit with a 90 year
old wearing a tie riding shot gun. Did his partner laugh at him or did they still feel
justified in their stop?
There was also a weird irony that he stopped me right in
front of Moody Park, the historic site where thousands mostly Hispanics protested
the light sentencing received by police for the beating death of Joe Campos
Torres.
In that moment, on that day, I felt that I understood how
people feel when they are singled out and stopped by the police. I couldn’t
help but wonder if all he had seen was a Hispanic woman in a poor neighborhood
and that he had assumed that I was the type of person who would shoot the
finger at him.
What had he expected when he stopped me? I’ll never know the
answer to any of these questions. I just know that in that moment I felt like this
person who is supposed to make me feel protected and safe, saw me, thought he
saw me do something I didn’t do, and then made assumptions about the kind of
person I was and about my character. And that is not a cool feeling.
1 comment:
This is great Loida. I am sorry it happened to you. Love you. Dwight
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