Police apologize after gun drawn on NFL player
DALLAS The Dallas Police Department confirmed Thursday that an officer drew a gun on NFL running back Ryan Moats and his wife after he stopped them to give them a ticket even as they begged to hurry to the bedside of their dying mother.
As he rushed his family to the hospital, Ryan Moats, 26, rolled through a red light. A Dallas police officer pulled their SUV over outside the emergency room at the Baylor Regional Medical Center at Plano.
“He was pointing a gun at me as soon as I got out of the car,” said his wife, Tamishia Moats. “It was the weirdest feeling because I’ve never had a gun pointed at me before under those circumstances.”
Seconds later, Ryan Moats and his wife explained that her mother was dying inside the hospital.
“You really want to go through this right now?” Moats pleaded. “My mother-in-law is dying. Right now!”
A Dallas police spokesman said that Officer Robert Powell told his commanders that he drew his gun, but did not point it. Lt. Andy Harvey said it is not unusual for officers to draw a gun without pointing it. Drawing a gun is not unusual in traffic stops where officers feel threatened.
Officer Powell could not be reached for comment.
Powell, 25, spent long minutes writing Moats a ticket and threatened him with arrest during the incident.
“I can screw you over,” the officer told Moats. “I’d rather not do that.”
The scene last week, captured by a dashboard video camera, prompted apologies and the promise of an investigation from Dallas police officials.
“There were some things that were said that were disturbing, to say the least,” said Harvey.
Moats’ mother-in-law, Jonetta Collinsworth, was struggling at 45 with breast cancer that had spread throughout her body. Family members rushed to her bedside from as far away as California.
On March 17, the Moatses had gone to their Frisco home to get some rest. Around midnight, they received word that they needed to hurry back to the hospital if they wanted to see Collinsworth before she died.
The couple, along with Collinsworth’s father and an aunt, jumped into the SUV and headed back toward the hospital. They exited the Dallas North Tollway, just down the street from the hospital.
Moats turned on his hazard lights. He stopped at a red light, where, he said, the only nearby motorist signaled for him to go ahead. He went through.
Powell, watching traffic from a hidden spot, flipped on his lights and sirens. In less than a minute, he caught up to the SUV and followed for about 20 more seconds as Moats found a parking spot outside the emergency room.
Tamishia, 27, was the first out. Powell drew his gun and yelled at her to get back in.
“Get in there!” he yelled. “Let me see your hands!”
“My mom is dying,” she explained to him.
Powell was undeterred.
“I saw in his eyes that he really did not care,” Tamishia Moats said. “Honestly, I don’t think I cared that he had a gun pointed at me. My train of thought is that I’m going to see my mom in the hospital before she dies.”
Tamishia Moats and her great-aunt ignored the officer and headed into the hospital.
“It was almost like a movie,” she said, “It felt like we had robbed a bank or something.”
Ryan Moats, who stayed behind with the father of the dying woman, said Powell also pointed his gun at him. He said he put his hands on the car because he was afraid that he might get shot.
“I put my hands on the car so he couldn’t say I reached for something,” Ryan said. “He didn’t ask me to put my hands on the car. I just did it to try to protect myself. I was pleading with him.”
He tried to explain the situation to the officer.
“I waited until no traffic was coming,” Moats told Powell, explaining his passage through the red light. “I got seconds before she’s gone, man.”
Powell demanded his license and proof of insurance. Moats produced his license but said he didn’t know where the insurance paperwork was.
“Just give me a ticket or whatever,” he said, beginning to sound exasperated and a little argumentative.
“Shut your mouth,” Powell told him. “You can cooperate and settle down, or I can just take you to jail for running a red light.”
There was more back and forth.
“If you’re going to give me a ticket, give me a ticket.”
“Your attitude says that you need one.”
“All I’m asking you is just to hurry up.”
Powell began a lecture.
“If you want to keep this going, I’ll just put you in handcuffs,” the officer said, “and I’ll take you to jail for running a red light.”
Powell made several more points, including that the SUV was illegally parked. Moats replied “Yes sir” to each.
“Understand what I can do,” Powell concluded. “I can tow your truck. I can charge you with fleeing. I can make your night very difficult.”
“I understand,” Moats responded. “I hope you’ll be a great person and not do that.”
Hospital security guards arrived and told Powell that the Moatses’ relative really was upstairs dying.
Powell spent several minutes inside his squad car, in part to check Moats for outstanding warrants. He found none.
Another hospital staffer came out and spoke with a Plano police officer who had arrived.
“Hey, that’s the nurse,” the Plano officer told Powell. “She said that the mom’s dying right now, and she’s wanting to know if they can get him up there before she dies.”
“All right,” Powell replied. “I’m almost done.”
As Moats signed the ticket, Powell continued his lecture.
“Attitude’s everything,” he said. “All you had to do is stop, tell me what was going on. More than likely, I would have let you go.”
It had been about 13 minutes.
Moats and Collinsworth’s father went into the hospital, where they found Collinsworth had died, with her daughter at her side.
The Moatses, who are black, said Wednesday that they can’t help but think that race might have played a part in how Powell, who is white, treated them.
“I think he should lose his job,” said Ryan Moats, a Dallas native who attended Bishop Lynch High School and now plays for the Houston Texans.
Powell was hired in January 2006. Assistant Chief Floyd Simpson said Powell told police officials that he believed that he was doing his job. He has been re-assigned to dispatch pending an investigation.
“When people are in distress, we should come to the rescue,” said Simpson. “We shouldn’t further their distress.”
Collinsworth was buried Saturday in Louisiana.

Mar 28, 2009 at 8:06 p.m.
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Here's one you may not have seen yet. 83 year old woman dies while deputy writes a ticket. A son was taking his mom to the hospital when a sheriffs deputy stopped him and refused to let him drive to the hospital that was less than one mile away.
http://video.aol.com/video-detail/woman-...
Mar 28, 2009 at 7:26 p.m.
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I just watched the video and could not hold back the tears. The second Moats said his mother-in-law is dying right now he should of held back and had some compassion and understanding for him being so upset. How would most people act with that kind of news? I can't say I would be very calm or rational.
Not to mention when the officer saw him pull into the ER parking lot he should of assumed something was wrong! Nobody that insensitive should hold a badge. The police aren't just here to hand out tickets, we teach our children early on they are someone we can trust. He broke that trust and should be fired with NO pay!!!
Mar 28, 2009 at 6:26 p.m.
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I agree that BOTH sides could have handeled it better. Yes, he was at fault for breaking the law, but the officer could also have shown some compassion. He could just as easily given the tickets after they had a chance to say goodbye, or let them off with a warning and let them go be with their family.
Mar 28, 2009 at 12:42 p.m.
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Both sides could have handled this situation much better than they did.
Mar 28, 2009 at 12:29 p.m.
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jayvee, that's a good point too. It might have had some chance of reducing the confrontation. Still, you would assume the officer could use some discretion and say that he would enforce the laws AFTER they returned from the ER, pretty much what Moats was offering. Or he could have gone in with them and found out what the score was. Laws are laws, but what's the rush on a misdemeanor ticket?
Mar 28, 2009 at 9:26 a.m.
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These types of power trips by law enforcement are becoming far to common.I believe that personal evaluations by an outside agency would red flag some of these officers so that problem areas can be addressed or officers can be reassigned.
Mar 28, 2009 at 8:59 a.m.
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If you watch the video it shows him running a second light and not stopping with the police car following. Laws are laws for a reason. When he was asked for his insurance the driver told the police officer to go find it...nice. Was the officer rude, maybe. But not anymore so than the driver. If he would have just stopped right away when the squad got behind him and explained what was going on instead of continuing all the way to the parking and then parking in a stall this might have all been defused. The only race issue here is obvious one was white and the others were not; there was no way the officer new the race of the driver before the law was broken.
Mar 28, 2009 at 2:37 a.m.
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Totally inexcuseable and reeks of "power trip" on the part of the officer. You can bet your butt that race had alot to do with this! This officer has no buisness EVER being allowed to carry a gun again!
Mar 27, 2009 at 2:01 p.m.
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He pulled a gun in the parking lot of the emergency room?!
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JimPI, unfortunately, her statement is entirely believable. Blacks in the US are 33% more likely than whites to have been a victim of a violent crime, and six times as likely as whites to be victims of homicide. They are also, of course, disproportionately prosecuted.
http://www.sultonlawoffices.com/naacpcle...
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/bvv...
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The video is available on YouTube.
http://fifthdown.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/...
Mar 27, 2009 at 1:54 p.m.
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for any who cares... watch the "AP Video" of this stop... Wonder why they pass on the right and have guns in their windows... Officer Powell needs some time off along with some heavy retraining.. there was just not compassion in this Officers tactics... Hope this servers him well
Mar 27, 2009 at 1:34 p.m.
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This is so incredibly sad. I have tears in my eyes as the scene plays out in my mind as I read the article. I am a registered nurse and have been with many families who arrive back at a loved one's bedside just moments after the person has passed on. Their guilt and grief is overwhelming. There is no excuse for this officer's behavior. Let him sit at the radio for the rest of his career. My mom was a Beloit Police dispatcher for more than 20 years. She said regular officers "hated" being assigned to dispatch. It serves him right.
Mar 27, 2009 at 1:16 p.m.
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"The Dallas Police Department confirmed Thursday that an officer drew a gun on NFL running back Ryan Moats and his wife after he stopped them to give them a ticket even as they begged to hurry to the bedside of their dying mother."
So, Moats and his wife have the same mother?
'“He was pointing a gun at me as soon as I got out of the car,” said his wife, Tamishia Moats. “It was the weirdest feeling because I’ve never had a gun pointed at me before under those circumstances.”'
So, she's had a gun pointed at her under different circumstances?
While I do fully believe race was a factor, the cop should be disciplined severely, and the whole situation was handled poorly, there is a lesson in this.
If you are pulled over by an officer, unless your own life is in immediate danger, DO NOT EXIT YOUR VEHICLE UNLESS TOLD TO DO SO. Jumping out of your car after pulling over will not lead to good things happening in your immediate future.
Mar 27, 2009 at 1:08 p.m.
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yeah i have to say this time the cops to not get an applause from me for the heartless way they treated this man
Mar 27, 2009 at 12:58 p.m.
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I'm pretty confident that race did indeed play a role in this. Ever notice on "Cops" when a perp is fleeing, do they ever go directly to a hospital? The man's mother-in-law was dying and tried to explain it, in fact they all tried to explain it to this officer, to no avail. While I understand what cops go though on a daily basis, was this behavior necessary under the circumstances? NO! Should this cop be disciplined to the full extent for his actions? YES! He prevented a loving husband from being with his wife as her mother was dying, a loving father from his dying daughter's bedside. At least the daughter took it upon herself to ignore this officer and was there at the moment of her mother's passing...
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