The Cody Police Department has placed one of its officers on paid leave while it investigates a traffic stop where the officerâs conduct has been called into question, the department announced late Friday.Â
The announcement comes after Cowboy State Daily reported about a YouTube video, stitched together from police bodycam and dash cam recordings, that shows Officer Blake Stinson and others being aggressive with and trying to pull a 17-year-old male out of a car by his arms. Stinson stopped the youth that day, Jan. 24, on suspicion of crossing in front of a pedestrian. Â
Stinson spoke harshly to the teen, yelled at him and demanded that he get out of the car. Â
The teen couldnât find his registration for the vehicle, which his mother owns. He called his mom and asked for her help. Â
When Stinson and another officer tried to pull the teen out of the vehicleâs open window by his arms, he yelled, âMom! Mom!â into his cellphone. Â
The stop happened in front of Cody High School as other teens were entering the school for the day, according to the teenâs mother. Â
A Wyoming defense attorney called Stinsonâs behavior âaggressiveâ and âoutrageousâ during a Wednesday interview with Cowboy State Daily. Â
Paid LeaveÂ
âThis necessary step has been taken while the internal investigation is ongoing and finalized regarding the matter,â wrote the department in a press release Friday announcing the suspension, adding that the city and department are committed to âa thorough and impartial examination of the matter at hand.â
The department also said it will provide updates as appropriate and allowable by law. Â
The Cody Police Department did not respond Friday afternoon to a Cowboy State Daily request for additional comment. A city of Cody spokesperson could not be reached for comment. Â
A Wednesday press release by Cody Police Chief Chuck Baker warned the public to be careful when watching a video of the stop thatâs been edited and has a voiceover.Â
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.Â
âGave Him A VacationâÂ
The teenâs mother, Teresa Piper, was not impressed by the paid leave announcement. Â
âRight. They gave him a vacation,â she told Cowboy State Daily on Friday evening. âIt doesnât surprise me, itâs very disappointing.âÂ
Piper said she hopes to see Stinson âheld accountable for his actions.â
Piper also has filed a formal complaint about the traffic stop on her son.
She called the departmentâs internal investigation a waiting game and said sheâs losing faith in the legal system. Â
Piper said she has the full, unedited footage from the incident, but that everything relevant to the public is in the portions featured in the YouTube video. Â
She said while Stinson conducted the stop and yelled at her son, none of the other officers tried to intervene. Â

Morning BellÂ
The teen was embarrassed by the incident, Piper said, especially since it happened outside Cody High School as students were entering for the day. Â
âHeâs dealt with a lot of stress and anxiety and, you know, embarrassment, harassment,â she said. âOther students were taking videos of it, making rumors of it.â Â
Cody High School dispatched a statement that day via Facebook letting families know the police presence didnât signal danger at school. Â
âThis morning there were police in front of the school with lights on for a traffic violation,â reads the statement. âAll is well inside of school.â Â
Piper said the schoolâs message indicates âhow extreme the situation was.â Â
DismissedÂ
Police arrested the teen for interfering with officers for refusing to get out of the vehicle when ordered. The charge was later dismissed, for what the departmentâs Wednesday statement calls âprocedural reasons, so that the charges can be dealt with at the appropriate time and in the appropriate manner.â Â
Piper said the charge was dismissed in March. Â
Stinson told the teen he could smell marijuana in the car, and the police later found some marijuana in the car, according to the video narrator, who claimed that the search was illegal because there was no real cause for the traffic stop.
In an interview with Cowboy State Daily on Wednesday, Piper acknowledged that there was marijuana paraphernalia in the car when it was stopped.
The original reason given for pulling the youthâs vehicle over was because he almost hit a pedestrian in a crosswalk. But in the video, the car appears to cross the intersection before the pedestrian entered his lane, the narrator said, while showing grainy dash cam video. Â Â
 Contact Clair McFarland at Clair@CowboyStateDaily.com





