VA woman reads cop’s own ‘racially motivated’ ticket file after he stops her

A woman on TikTok has stunned a Virginia police officer after reading him data she compiled over six months in his ticketing record against People of Color.
Charlotte Carter, 36, recently had a viral video recording her telling an officer who stopped her how 80 percent of the people he stopped her in the past six months were black, even though they were claims it’s fair 20 percent of the county’s residents are black.
According to the 2021 census data, 25 percent of Chesterfield County, Virginia residents identify as Black or African American.
“Only 20 percent of the population of Chesterfield [County] is black,” Carter tells the officer as he stands by her window. “I don’t know how you managed to give 80 percent minorities a ticket.”
Carter says she believes she was pulled over in an act of intimidation over videos she posted on the app discussing alleged corruption within local law enforcement.

Charlotte Carter, 36, recently had a viral video recording her telling how 80 percent of the people the officer who stopped her for the past six months were black
Video released Sunday shows the woman reading the officer identified as “S Scott” his history of tickets, including 250 tickets over the past six months that resulted in court appearances. DailyMail.com looked up the official’s full name.
Carter compared this to another officer she looked at, who made just 240 traffic court appearances in the entire year.
“In the last six months, since I did that about a month or two ago, you’ve issued speeding tickets to 250 people in Chesterfield who went to Chesterfield Courthouse,” she tells the officer.
The video, titled “Racist Cops Take Revenge,” has been viewed more than a million times and liked by nearly 138,000 people.
‘Mr. Scott, you attract over 80 percent black people. I’ve been looking through all your tickets for six months… just 20 percent of the Chesterfield population [County] is black,” says Carter, wondering how the math works out.
The woman continues to fill out the information on the ticket while accusing him of being “gung-ho” for targeting people of color.
“You write a lot of tickets,” Carter says while returning the signed ticket.
She said it might have been a coincidence that she was stopped by the officer, but she turned on her camera just in case it wasn’t
“As I was about to sign the ticket, I saw that his name was S. Scott,” Carter said. “And when I saw S. Scott on that paper, I just put my camera on record.”

The video, titled “Racist Cops Take Revenge,” has been viewed more than a million times and liked by nearly 138,000 people

She said it might have been a coincidence that she was stopped by the officer, but she turned on her camera just in case it wasn’t
Carter provided the ticket documents in an interview with the Daily Beast. The records are also public and can be viewed on Chesterfield District Court’s website.
Data showed the man, who Chesterfield County Police says is a Virginia State Trooper, had stopped 53 drivers in six months, mostly in October.
30 were black, 13 were white, and 10 were listed with no race. The Daily Beast reported that the 10’s last names “appeared to be either Hispanic or Arabic.”
A local news outlet reported in October that the majority of drivers in Virginia are black or Hispanic.
The woman said she examined Scott and another officer just to see what their traffic stops in the area were like.

The woman, dubbed “vapersianprincess” in the video app, claimed the officer followed her several kilometers before the stop
The woman, dubbed “vapersianprincess” in the video app, claimed the officer followed her several kilometers before the stop.
She said the officer, identified as “S Scott,” chased her for two to three miles before finally stopping her for an illegal right turn on red.
The Virginia resident says her ongoing standoff with law enforcement in the area began in 2022 when she began posting about alleged child abuse involving a friend’s son. She said she noticed the child, who is multiracial, was bruised and underweight.
The woman, who is licensed in practical nursing according to public records, said she felt an obligation to involve law enforcement.
However, Carter told the Daily Beast she believes the police did not act as quickly as they should have and that they did not take the case seriously because the child’s father was black.
An arrest was eventually made, but Carter says that was only after she posted a TikTok in March about the situation and her repeated attempts to get police to intervene.
The TikTok video she posted has received nearly 5 million views and more than 630,000 likes. After that, she said, the police showed up in everyday situations.
“I ended up trying to apply for emergency custody but the police started falsely arresting me,” she told the Daily Beast.

Carter told the outlet she’s been stopped by police “about 10 times” since she started speaking out about police in the area
Just weeks after her first viral video, the woman was arrested for trespassing on her own property, she says.
“They also added three additional charges for contributing to a minor’s crime for each of my three children because I encouraged them to break into our home,” Carter said.
Carter told the outlet she’s been stopped by police “about 10 times” since she started speaking out about police in the area.
Court records show that she was arrested five times and charged multiple times during those days.
In April, Chesterfield County Police Chief Jeffrey Katz called the woman for attention without giving her name.
“Some people have messaged me to share a series of TikTok videos made by a member of our community who seems to be really enjoying the attention she’s receiving by claiming our department has an allegation of child abuse indifferent,” Katz wrote.
“Ultimately, upon completion of our investigation into this case, we made an arrest,” the chief said, noting that he would not use her name so as not to give her “additional notoriety.”
Katz doubled down and stated he wouldn’t.stand by while someone sits behind a keyboard trying to belittle the work our people are doing to protect the children in our community.’
Despite her arrests, Carter says she finds it “empowering” to call the police.
“The wheels of justice are very, very slow and it takes patience and perseverance and not giving up,” Carter said. “I stand by what I believe in at all costs. I’m ready to die on this hill.”
8News Richmond spoke to Katz in October and claimed racial profiling was “not a factor” in the department’s traffic stops.
He did not elaborate on the statistics cited by Carter but said: “There is a huge disproportion of black and Hispanic drivers dying at the wheel in Virginia.”
The Daily Beast revealed that Katz was the police chief of Boynton Beach, Fla., before moving to Virginia.
In 2017, four officers from his department were charged with beating an unarmed black man. The incident culminated in Katz being asked to resign or be fired.
DailyMail.com reached out to both the Virginia State Police and Chesterfield County Police Department, but could not reach officials for comment at the time of publication.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11629911/VA-woman-reads-cops-racially-motivated-ticketing-record-pulls-over.html?ns_mchannel=rss&ns_campaign=1490&ito=1490 VA woman reads cop’s own ‘racially motivated’ ticket file after he stops her