LA officials tying police’ hands to put feelings ahead of public safety

Los Angeles Takes Another Swing at Police Tools

The Los Angeles City Council has voted to crack down on so called pretextual traffic stops, which means officers will have far less room to pull over drivers, bicyclists, or pedestrians for minor violations unless there is an immediate safety risk. That sounds tidy on paper, but in real life it means things like broken taillights, expired tags, cracked windshields, busted mirrors, illegal tint, loud exhaust, or missing plates may no longer give officers a reason to stop someone. In a city already dealing with crime and traffic chaos, the Council is acting like public safety is just a branding problem. It is the political version of taping over a warning light and pretending the engine is fine.

Supporters Call It Reform, Critics Call It Handcuffs

Backers of the move say the goal is to reduce racial profiling, and activists have long argued that Black and Latino drivers are stopped more often. But that debate is not as simple as the loudest people make it sound. Police stops are not just about handing out tickets for a dirty tail light. They can lead officers to illegal guns, drugs, stolen vehicles, or wanted suspects who would otherwise keep driving around unnoticed. LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell has said these stops are an important investigative tool, and the Supreme Court has upheld pretext stops as constitutional. In other words, this is not some wild new police tactic cooked up in secret. It is a longstanding tool that helps officers do more than sit around waiting for a 911 call.

Officials Praise the Move While Crime Stays Real

Councilmember Imelda Padilla pushed hard for the change and told the oversight board there were “no excuses.” Mayor Karen Bass also praised the Council’s vote and said she would work with the Police Commission and Chief McDonnell to implement it. That is classic Sacramento-style theater, except this time the stage is Los Angeles and the audience is the public paying the price. The city already adopted restrictions in 2022, including requirements that officers record themselves on camera explaining why they made a stop for a minor violation. That did not satisfy the activists, so now they want to move from “oversight” to near prohibition. Apparently, the problem was never too much paperwork. It was that police were still allowed to police.

The Push Fits a Bigger Left Wing Agenda

This vote is part of a larger movement to pull officers out of anything activists call “too confrontational,” which often seems to mean anything effective. Reform groups like Catalyst California and the ACLU are already celebrating, while some on the left dream of handing traffic duties to unarmed civilian workers, roundabouts, and speed bumps as if concrete can replace cops. That may sound cute to college activists and city hall nodders, but it does not stop a suspect with a gun, drugs, or a stolen car. The LAPD rank and file, along with the Police Protective League, are expected to push back hard. Officers know what politicians keep forgetting, which is that a traffic stop can be the first and best chance to stop a violent criminal before someone gets hurt.

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JIMMY

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