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Black Family Held At Gunpoint After Police Typo Misidentifies Car As Stolen

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A Black family was held at gunpoint by police in Texas after an officer incorrectly entered their vehicle’s license plate.

On Saturday (July 29), Frisco police released body camera footage of the harrowing moment officers pulled over a Black family visiting from Little Rock, Arkansas, per HuffPost.

Police began tracking the family’s vehicle, a black Dodge Charger, after a Frisco officer identified as V. McQueen made a typo when entering their license plate. According to the Frisco Police Department, the car drew officers’ attention because it had out-of-state plates and because Chargers are high-theft vehicles.

A “high-risk traffic stop” was made with police drawing their guns and ordering the driver, who remains unnamed, to get out of the vehicle, the department said.

“What did I do?” the woman asked McQueen. “I’ve never been in trouble a day in my life. This is scaring the hell out of me.”

Frisco Police terrorize a black family at gunpoint after a cop runs Arkansas plate numbers through the Arizona database and then assumes the car is stolen when the plates don’t show up.
They then force the entire family out of the car one by one at gunpoint, making women and… pic.twitter.com/DWODQ6PmoH

— 🥀_ Imposter 🥀 (@Imposter_Edits) July 30, 2023

The woman was accompanied by three other people in the car including her husband, son, and nephew. The two minors were 12 and 13 years old.

After the driver got out of the car, police ordered her son to do the same. Officers put the son in handcuffs and placed him in a police car while the woman continued to talk to police.

“Is he in cuffs? Please don’t let them do nothing to my baby. This is very traumatizing,” the driver said.

“Listen, bro, we just here for a basketball tournament,” a man added from the car. “Don’t do this to my son, bro.”

Throughout the interaction, police had their guns pointed at the car as well as at the woman and the child who was forced to exit the vehicle.

McQueen eventually realized that she accidentally ran their license plate as one from Arizona instead of Arkansas. She admitted to the family that she had made a mistake as officers put their guns away and apologized.

“This is all my fault. I apologize for this. I know it was very traumatic for you and your nephew and your son. And like I said, it’s on me. There are consequences that come with that,” McQueen told the driver.

The husband appeared to be emotional over the incident.

“It could’ve went all wrong for us, though,” he said. “If I would’ve went to reach for my phone, we could’ve all got killed.”

The Frisco Police Department said it’s investigating the incident.

“We made a mistake,” Frisco Police Chief David Shilson said in a statement. “Our department will not hide from its mistakes. Instead, we will learn from them.”

“I empathize with them and completely understand why they’re upset. I apologized on behalf of our department and assured them that we will hold ourselves accountable and provide transparency through the process. This incident does not reflect the high standard of service that our officers provide on a daily basis to our residents, businesses and visitors,” Shilson added.

The Black Information Network is your source for Black News! Get the latest news 24/7 on The Black Information Network. Listen now on the iHeartRadio app or click HERE to tune in live.

About Post Author

Black Information Network

Black Information Network is the first and only 24/7 national and local all-news audio service dedicated to providing an objective, accurate and trusted source of continual news coverage with a Black voice and perspective. BIN is enabled by the resources, assets and financial support of iHeartMedia and the support of its Founding Partners: Bank of America, CVS Health, GEICO, Lowe’s, McDonald’s USA, Sony, 23andMe and Verizon. BIN is focused on service to the Black community and providing an information window for those outside the community to help foster communication, accountability and deeper understanding.

Black Information Network is distributed nationally through the iHeartRadio app and accessible via mobile, smart speakers, smart TVs and other connected platforms, and on dedicated all-news local broadcast AM/FM radio stations. BIN also provides the news service for iHeartMedia’s 106 Hip Hop, R&B and Gospel stations across the country. Please visit www.BINNews.com for more information.

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