Traffic & Transit
Here's Why Easton Police Are Most Likely To Stop Your Vehicle
A recent report breaks down the top reasons each police department in the state pulls over motorists.
EASTON, CT — Central Connecticut State University’s Institute for Municipal and Regional Policy released its annual report of traffic stop data, which includes a department-by-department breakdown. Data is from 2017.
The annual study primarily looks for disparate treatment of racial and ethnic minorities during traffic stops. Researchers work on more in-depth analyses when disparities are noted and communicate with departments to learn more. The researchers emphasize that disparate statistics don’t automatically mean a department engages in biased policing.
Data showed that there are large and statistically significant disparities in how minorities are treated statewide during a traffic stop.
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"The new post-stop test for differential outcomes provides compelling evidence that minority motorists receive different dispositions (tickets, warnings, searches) after a stop is made, even after we condition on the basis for the stop and other potentially confounding factors," the study authors wrote.
Related: Here’s Where You Are Most Likely To Get Pulled Over In CT
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Other evidence found that the bar for searching a minority motorist was lower than that of white drivers. It also found that police are far less likely to be successful finding incriminating evidence when searching a minority motorist compared to a white motorist.The top overall reasons for being pulled over in Connecticut during 2017 were for speeding (28.2 percent), cell phone use (9 percent) and defective lights (8.9 percent). However, different departments tend to enforce certain violations more than others and the results vary widely from department-to-department.
Here is a detailed look at Easton’s stats:
Easton ranked ninth in the state for speed-related violations; 53.5 percent of the tickets handed out had to do with how fast the vehicle was moving.
Here are the top three reasons the Easton PD pulls motorists over:
- Speed
- Stop sign
- Registration
The top 5 municipal departments with the highest rate of traffic stops per 1,000 residents:
- Wilton: 402
- New Canaan: 388
- Westport: 384
- Ridgefield: 372
- Windsor: 365
Your chance of getting out of a traffic stop with a warning or ticket highly depends on the department. Some departments give a warning more than nine times out of 10 while with others there is more than a 60 percent chance of getting a ticket.
Across the state around a third of traffic stops ended with a verbal warning, 15 percent with a written warning and 43 percent with a ticket.
When they weren't handing out tickets, Easton Police were likely giving written (66.0 percent) or verbal (11.2 percent) warnings. Another 3.9 percent ended in a misdemeanor summons being issued.
Highest warning rates:
- Weston: 94.3%
- Eastern CT State University: 90.8%
- Torrington: 89.3%
- Redding: 88.6%
- State Capitol Police 86.8%
Highest infraction rates
- Danbury: 63.7%
- Bridgeport: 59.9%
- New London 58.5%
- DMV 58.3%
- Trumbull: 57%
Highest search rates:
- Waterbury: 17.8%
- Stratford: 15.9%
- Yale University: 12%
- Vernon: 11.6%
- Bridgeport: 10.8%
Highest cell phone violation rates
- Danbury 34.9%
- West Hartford 30.4%
- Hamden 27.4%
- Brookfield 23.4%
- Bridgeport 23.3%
Registration stop
- Trumbull 23.9%
- Troop L 22%
- North Haven 21.2%
- West Haven 20.6%
- Redding 18.8%
Speeding stop
- Ledyard 63.5%
- CSP Headquarters 58.8%
- Ridgefield 57.9%
- Weston 57.8%
- Simsbury 57.4%
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