Nearly three years after garnering national attention for an aggressive traffic stop of a local high school student, a Cody police officer wasnât stripped of his badge during a Wednesday meeting of the stateâs law officer licensing board.
Officer Blake Stinson was under review after complaints were made about three of his interactions with residents, including the January 2023 stop of a then-17-year-old Cody High School student.
The stop went viral months later in May 2023 when an edited version of dash cam and body cam video from the stop was posted to YouTube, showing Stinson being aggressive with the teen while stopped in the high school parking lot.
While the Wyoming Office of Administrative Hearings recommended pulling Stinsonâs accreditation as a police officer, the Peace Officer Standards and Training Board (POST) ultimately rejected that on Wednesday.
Instead, heâll be cited for a code of conduct violation and be ordered to have additional training, the seven-member board decided.
After debating the nature of the complaints against Stinson, which included the interactions with the CHS student and two other contacts with residents, the POST board decided the incidents didnât rise to the level of undermining public confidence in the law enforcement profession overall.
Wyoming Attorney General Keith Kautz, who sits on the board, made that argument, telling the rest of the POST members that, in his opinion, those three incidents in the course of about 18 months isnât proof of that threshold.
âThree times out of 400 is not a pattern of conduct,â he said during the Wednesday meeting. âAnd thereâs no evidence in this file, or in this case of over the 18 months ⌠how many engagements this officer had â I canât find thereâs any proof of a pattern of conduct at all.â
Not Reliable
He also pointed out that some of the complaints and testimony offered in the three incidents arenât reliable enough to warrant a vote to strip Stinson of his badge.
âI find most of them biased, self-serving testimony, and none of them â to me â rose at all even close to the level of something thatâs so serious that it undermines public confidence in law enforcement,â he said.
âSo, thereâs my discussion,â he added. âI donât think the state made its case ⌠and Iâm willing to listen to what some of you would have to say.â
Board member Richard Patterson, himself a former law enforcement officer, said he largely agreed with Kautz.
âI know how things can goâ as an officer, he said. âAnd what I saw here were several examples of probably emotion-driven decisions as opposed to maybe ⌠having a little bit more self-control.â
Thatâs not ideal, Patterson said, but to him, âit looked more like a bad day than a pattern â a situation that didnât go the way you intended, to which we all are aware of those.
âSo, I would agree with Mr. Kautz that I donât see a pattern, and I donât see anything rising to that level.â
Kautz also pointed out that there was other video evidence presented in the three cases, but that he doesnât view the YouTube one as credible because it had been edited.
The Edited Video
The edited video uploaded to the LackLuster YouTube channel shows an agitated Officer Stinson telling the 17-year-old to get out of his car or heâd pull him out as the teen verbally resists.
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.
A little later in their exchange after an editing cut, Stinson and another officer try to physically pull the driver out of the car by grabbing him through the open window.
Stinson says, âWhen you donât do what youâre told, this is what happens.â
Cody Police âAbsolutely Do Agreeâ
Repeated attempts to reach the former 17-year-oldâs mother for reaction to the POST boardâs decision were unsuccessful. Messages to her last known phone numbers and email werenât returned by the time this story was published.
However, after the edited video of her sonâs interaction with Stinson was made public in May 2023, Teresa Piper told Cowboy State Daily at the time that she âwas very upsetâ by what she saw and thought he shouldnât be a police officer in Cody.
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 also said doing it right in front of the high school in view of all his classmates âwas a little outrageous. It was right in front of the high school right when the high school was letting out.â
The Cody Police Department said it supports the POST boardâs decision, and that since the viral video moment with Officer Stinson, the CPD has made proper interactions with the public a priority.
âWe absolutely do agree with the POST decision to throw that out and allow Officer Stinson to keep his certificate,â said department spokesman Lt. Juston Wead.Â
In response to the high school stop, the CPD had an outside agency review the departmentâs policies and recommend improvements.
Stinson also was placed on administrative leave for a time after the incident.
âDe-escalation training has been incorporated into regular trainings of officers,â he said. âThat helps officers learn the skills they need when interacting with the public.â
He also said that while the YouTube video stirred up a lot of emotion and criticism, it was edited to elicit that reaction.
âCertainly, when someone takes a video and edits it to be skewed to their point of view, itâs going to give a perception that maybe isnât the whole story.â
Greg Johnson can be reached at greg@cowboystatedaily.com.





