Video footage of a Cody police officerâs traffic stop and arrest of a local 17-year-old is going viral for all the wrong reasons.
A nearly 9-minute edited video of Officer Blake Stinson stopping and ultimately arresting a 17-year-old Cody High School student in January uploaded to the LackLuster YouTube channel Monday already has more than 430,000 views.
Titled âDash Cam Proves Cop Wrong â Case Dismissed,â the video is stitched together from police vehicle dash cam and body cam video. In it, Stinson claims he pulled the teen over for nearly hitting a pedestrian in a crosswalk in front of Cody High School.
The video shows that, in fact, was inaccurate â and a lot more that wasnât kosher about the stop or Officer Stinsonâs behavior during the stop, said Steven Titus of Titus & Associates of Gillette, who specializes in criminal defense law.
The Park County Attorney's office has since dismissed any charges against the teen.
âAggressiveâ And âOutrageousâ
âFirst off, you knew right away it was going to be an interesting interaction,â said Titus, who reviewed the video at the request of Cowboy State Daily. âIâve watched thousands of traffic stops ⌠and this is the first one Iâve seen where the officer really had no reason to be aggressive.â
In the video, Stinson is aggressive with the teen driver from the beginning, and the interaction escalates from there. And it was unnecessary, Titus said.
âIn this case, the officer just started fighting with the driver from the get-go, and that just sets the tone for the whole interaction,â he said. âI donât know if he was having a bad day or what.
âAnd, it looks like the kid didnât even commit the traffic infraction in the first place.â
In the video, Stinson orders the driver to give him his license, registration and proof of insurance. The teen, who appears flustered, says he doesnât know where the documents are as itâs his motherâs car. So, he calls her on his cellphone.
When he offers the cellphone to Stinson to talk to her about the stop and where the documents are, the officer declines to talk to her and instead orders the teen out of the car.
âOK, go ahead and step out of the vehicle,â he says. âStep out of the vehicle. I can smell marijuana in the vehicle, get out!â
The driver doesnât get out immediately.
âIâm not going to tell you again!â Stinson says. âYouâre going to get out of the vehicle or Iâm going to drag you out!â
The incident escalates from there.
Stinson: âOpen the door. Open the door now!â
Driver: âMy momâs on the way.â
Stinson: âI donât care. Open the door now.â
Driver: âCan I get my mom down here?â
Stinson: âNope.â
Driver: âIâm not 18 years old.â
Stinson: âIt doesnât matter. I saw a violation, I stopped you for it, and youâve already talked back to me about getting your stuff (documents) out.â
Driver: âIâm trying to figure out whatâs going on.â
Stinson: âGet out of the vehicle, thatâs whatâs going on.â
As Stinson and another officer try to physically pull the driver out of the car by grabbing him through the open window, Stinson also says, âWhen you donât do what youâre told, this is what happens.â

âAn Overzealous Officerâ
Titus said that, while the driver did do some things wrong â namely not providing his driverâs license when told to â it was clear from the start that the officer began the stop aggressively and caused it to escalate.
âWhen you get pulled over, whether the law enforcement officerâs in the right or wrong, you do need to show your ID,â Titus said, adding that from the start it was apparent that ânothing good was going to come from this whole situation.â
Even more concerning for Titus than Stensonâs aggression was that he seems to lie or embellish to other officers who arrive on the scene later to justify the traffic stop in the first place, he said.
In the video, he tells other officers that the driver almost hit a pedestrian, who had to swerve to miss getting hit by the car. But Stensonâs dash cam shows the pedestrian crossed behind the car after it had begun making its turn.
âUp until he lied, he couldâve been having a bad day, but then he embellished to justify it to other officers,â Titus said, adding that those other officers also shouldâve acted to defuse the situation.
âThe situation couldâve been defused many times where it didnât have to end up on YouTube,â he said. âThis is an overzealous officer who did what he did.â
That the officer would even pose the appearance of embellishing or fabricating reasons for making a stop puts the entire Cody Police Department in jeopardy, Titus said. Thatâs because it opens a window for defendants to question the validity of their tickets or arrests involving Stinson in the future.
âWhat people should be asking is why are we allowing officers that lie to patrol our streets?â he said. âWhen he embellished what happened, that stinks. We hold (police) in such high esteem ... and it really hurts law enforcement to lie to other law enforcement about what happened.â

Mom âWas Very Upsetâ To See Video
Near the end of the video, the driverâs mother, Teresa Piper, arrives and tells another officer that she and her son have had interactions with Officer Stinson before.
She told Cowboy State Daily on Wednesday morning that Stinson arrested her for DUI in 2017 and had followed her son before the incident in late January. When she saw the video showing just how the stop went down, she was angry.
âI was very upset, because I felt Stinson couldâve handled it in a different manner,â she said. âHe didnât have to be so angry and upset.â
She said heâs âwell-known for thatâ type of behavior and that what happened that day âwas a little outrageous. It was right in front of the high school right when the high school was letting out.â
Piper also said that, while he wasnât required to talk to her when her son called at the beginning of the stop, had Stinson agreed to talk to her the entire interaction may have gone differently.
âI couldâve explained where the documents were and that I was on my way,â she said, adding her son âwas just a nervous wreck. As soon as he saw it was Officer Stinson, he was terrified. It couldâve been handled a lot differently.â
To be fair, Piper admitted her son did have marijuana paraphernalia in the car, but it was in a plastic case, so she questions how Stinson couldâve smelled it from outside the car as he says in the video.
She said that from the rough handling of removing her son from the car, âhe had bruises all over his arms,â but otherwise wasnât physically hurt. âBut definitely his pride. It happened in front of every student in Cody High School.â

What Should Happen?
In a Wednesday press release, Cody Police Chief Chuck Baker acknowledges the impact the video is having around the community and that the stop is being investigated.
He also said a former complaint, which Piper said she filed recently, is being reviewed, but that âwe will not be able to release the results of that investigation and any action that may be taken as a result of that investigation due to state laws which restrict the disclosure of that information.â
The press release also says that people should be careful in watching a video thatâs been edited and has a voiceover.
âWe also ask the community to understand that some videos and social media content which show portions of the video have been edited and narrated to show selective parts of the interaction, and do not necessarily tell the whole story,â the release says.
Still said he agrees that the video had been edited, but that it doesnât change his perception of what it shows.
âItâs obvious he was emotionally charged for really no reason,â Titus said. âThis whole situation couldâve been completely avoided if someone â and I know he didnât have to â but if he couldâve just talked to the mom.
âThere were a lot of things that went wrong here. Weâre lucky nobody really got hurt, nobody got shot or anything.â
Piper said the family may consider legal action, but hasnât decided yet.
In the mean time, she feels Stinson shouldnât be patrolling the streets of Cody.
âHe is definitely a bad apple. Heâs very aggressive, has a bad attitude,â she said. âWe have some amazing cops here in Cody, Wyoming. This guy is definitely not one of them.â
Titus said that whether the officer should be disciplined is up to that department, but he hopes the video can be motivation to change.
âCody deserves better than this, Wyoming deserves better than this, and I hope this officer gets whatever remedial training he needs,â he said.
Editor's note: We had reached out to two Wyoming attorneys for input on this story and because of a reporting error, an earlier version of this story attributed Steven Titus' comments to state Rep. Clark Stith, R-Rock Springs. That has been corrected.




