State Attorney
ANDREW H. WARREN
Thirteenth Judicial Circuit
419 N. Pierce Street
Tampa, Florida 33602-4022
(813) 2/2-3400

Policy Regarding Prosecution of Cases Based on Pedestrian and Bicycle Violations

Background

In October 2020, our office partnered with community representatives to form the Racial Justice
Work Group. The Work Group was tasked with identifying areas where the implementation of new initiatives or processes could address issues of racial disparity as part of our agency's mission to improve public safety while ensuring justice and fairness for our citizens. Since October 2020, the Work Group has held regular meetings to discuss specific prosecutorial issues, analyze criminal justice data, and examine actual cases, resulting in a series of policy proposals for consideration by our office.

One such proposal is to evaluate racial disparities in cases of resisting law enforcement without violence or the threat of violence, a misdemeanor. Our office asked researchers at Florida International University's Center for the Administration of Justice to review data regarding this category of crime. Using data from 2017-2019, FIU researchers found that Black defendants are overrepresented in resisting arrest without violence cases compared with all misdemeanors in general. During that period, Black defendants constitute approximately 33.6% of all misdemeanor defendants but 49.2% of all resisting without violence defendants.

In reviewing this category of cases, an area of focus that has emerged involves a subset of cases involving bicycle and pedestrian stops where the only charge resulting from the stop is resisting arrest without violence. Of the resisting arrest without violence cases referred to our office in which a bicycle or pedestrian violation was the reason for the initial contact, 71% involved Black defendants.

Bicycle and pedestrian stops can be a legal and legitimate law enforcement tool to promote
community safety, particularly in high crime areas. In many instances, however, bicycle and
pedestrian stops have limited public safety benefits. Furthermore, actual or even perceived racial disparities in the use of bicycle and pedestrian stops undermine trust within the communities that law enforcement serves.

Our analysis reveals that bicycle and pedestrian stops disproportionately burden Black citizens of Hillsborough County. To address this disparity, as well as to address inconsistencies in how cases resulting from these stops are prosecuted, and to ensure that prosecutorial resources are focused on crimes that pose a demonstrable public safety threat, it is necessary to memorialize
prosecution policy concerning charges arising out of stops based upon pedestrian or bicycle violations.

Filing Policy Regarding Cases Based Upon Bicycle or Pedestrian Violations

For any case referred to our office arising out of a stop for a bicycle or pedestrian violation, there is a presumption that our office will not prosecute the defendant. This policy is limited to our
determination that a presumption exists that prosecuting charges arising from these stops does not further public safety and has a disparate impact on Black bicyclists and pedestrians. It is not a finding or determination concerning the reasonable suspicion or probable cause necessary to
conduct a bicycle or pedestrian stop, and we continue to recognize that bicycle and pedestrian
violations are a valid law enforcement instrument under the appropriate circumstances.
For purposes of data collection, decisions not to proceed with prosecution based on this policy should be documented with the appropriate no file code (no file code 93: Based on SAO Pedestrian/Bicycle Stop Policy).

If based on the facts and circumstances of the case, the public safety needs of the community
outweigh the presumption to not file the case, the charge may be filed with the approval of a
supervisor. The reason for the exception and the supervisor's approval is to be documented in the file. This exception should be reserved for cases that pose a direct threat to public safety, such as where an individual has suffered physical harm or where a firearm is involved.

This policy applies only to arrests where the initial encounter between law enforcement and the defendant results from a non-criminal violation in connection with riding a bicycle or a pedestrian violation. This policy does not apply to arrests that arise out of a criminal violation independent from the bicycle or pedestrian stop, even if the defendant is ultimately apprehended while riding a bicycle or violating pedestrian laws