The fatal police shooting of Daunte Wright on Sunday is drawing fresh attention to two minor infractions in Minnesota law that many motorists might not realize can prompt a pullover.
Minnesota law forbids motorists from driving without current license tabs, and it also bans motorists from driving with anything obstructing the windshield, including air fresheners hanging from the rearview mirror.
Wright's killing reignited longstanding debate on social media and elsewhere about racial profiling as studies have shown that Black motorists are more likely to be pulled over for these types of infractions.
"Grabbing somebody for having an air freshener hanging in their mirror is a crap stop," said Charles P. Wilson, a former police chief in Ohio, who now chairs the National Association of Black Law Enforcement Officers. Police use minor infractions like expired tabs or air freshener violations as a way to target and pull over people of color, he said.
Former Brooklyn Center Police Chief Tim Gannon said that officers initially pulled over Wright for expired tabs, then noticed the air freshener. When they ran his license through their computer, they found he had a gross misdemeanor warrant. Former police officer Kim Potter shot and killed Wright after she mistakenly fired her handgun instead of her Taser, Gannon said.
Even though it is against Minnesota state law, an officer should just tell the person to remove the freshener or whatever is hanging on the mirror and send them on their way, said Wilson.
If police run the driver's license and find a warrant, they are duty bound to make sure it is not a mistake, he said. If they do have a warrant and it's not a felony, the officer should instruct them that they need to take care of it, he said.