Traffic Stops Generally, a Traffic Stop Consists Research Paper

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Traffic Stops

Generally, a traffic stop consists of an officer placing a person in custody pursuant to the authority in the Texas Transportation Code for a violation of a traffic law contained in either the Transportation Code or a local ordinance. Unfortunately, the statutory framework and the case law encourage confusion. Among the most perplexing problems in this area is that of determining how a particular detention is best characterized for purposes of legal analysis. What are often characterized as traffic stops are in reality stops made to investigate suspicions of other offenses. Usually, a traffic stop is based on action taken while driving or at least operating a motor vehicle. This need not be the case, however. Chapter 552 of the Transportation Code, for example, is titled, "Pedestrians" and prohibits some actions that can be taken on foot (Texas Statutes, 2009).

Given the confusion between arrests and detentions to issue citations, the subject is further muddled a law enforcement officer's decision to issue not a citation but a "warning" or to make a stop for that purpose. The matter is complicated by the complete lack of any provision for or reference to such warnings in the Code of Criminal Procedure or the traffic statutes (Melton, 2010). An officer has discretion in regard to traffic offense situations that includes not only to issue a citation or make a custodial arrest but also to take informal actions such as issuing of a warning. If a traffic stop is otherwise proper, a showing that the officer during the stop decided to neither arrest nor issue a citation and instead issue a warning is of no significance (Farrell, et al., 2010).

If the evidence shows that an officer made a stop intending to issue a warning rather than issue a citation or make a custodial arrest, this similarly should have no effect.

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The standard for determining the propriety of the stop should be no different. The stop itself should not be regarded as necessarily suspect for this reason (Ibid).

"Any peace officer may arrest without warrant a person found committing a violation of [Subtitle C ("Rules of the Road") of Title 7 of the Transportation Code]" (Texas Statutes, 2009, Trans. Code sec. 543.001). This basic statutory authorization for traffic stops is widely regarded as requiring that an offense be committed within the view of the officer (Farrell, et al., 2010). An officer who makes an "arrest" under section 543.001 must either immediately take the person before a magistrate or issue the person a "written notice to appear," generally referred to as a citation or ticket (Texas Statutes, 2009, Trans. Code secs. 543.002-003). A citation is mandatory if the offense is speeding or violation of the open container law, unless the person is a resident of another state or is operating a vehicle licensed in another state (Farrell, et al., 2010).

If the person arrested is issued a citation, the person must by signing the citation in duplicate make a written promise to appear in court as specified in the citation. When the person signs the citation, the officer retains the original and delivers the copy to the person arrested. "The officer shall then promptly release the person [arrested] from custody" (Texas Statutes, 2009, Trans. Code sec. 543.005). Although the Transportation Code uses the term "arrest" to describe the process by which a person is detained and later released pursuant to a promise to appear, it is clear that this procedure involves what both the courts and common usage refer to as a "traffic stop." Even though the statutory language requires that the detention involved be labeled an arrest, it is not the sort of "custodial.....

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"Traffic Stops Generally A Traffic Stop Consists" (2010, December 03) Retrieved July 3, 2025, from
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"Traffic Stops Generally A Traffic Stop Consists", 03 December 2010, Accessed.3 July. 2025,
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/traffic-stops-generally-traffic-stop-consists-49180