Police Chief Resigns Over Speed Trap Revenue

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Mike Jones, the police chief of Brookside Al., resigned Tuesday amidst accusations he set up a speed trap as a way to earn revenue for the town.ย  AL.com reported that Jones used the police department to ticket motorists on many minor offenses as they passed the city on Interstate 22.ย 

โ€œThis will confirm that earlier today, Mike Jones, resigned as the Police Chief for the Town of Brookside,โ€ read Tuesdayโ€™s statement from town clerk Debbie Keedy. โ€œSince this involves a personnel matter, the town has no further comment.โ€

On Wednesday, WIAT-TV reported a request by Brookside for the Alabama Peace Officerโ€™s Standards and Training Commission to perform a compliance audit of the police department.  The response by the agency was swift, and an audit was immediately initiated. 

WBRC-TV reported Alabama Lt. Governor Will Ainsworth requested a full audit of Brookside, โ€œfocusing on, but not limited to, their police department, municipal court, general and departmental funds.โ€ 

According to AL.com, Brooksideโ€™s primary source of income is now from the speed trap along I-22. From 2018-to 2020, town revenues from fines and forfeitures climbed more than 640%, totaling 49% of the $1.2 million budget. 

Only 1,253 people reside in the small, one-time mining town in north Jefferson County, AL.com reported. According to reports, Jones built a ten or more task force of full and part-time police officers dedicated to patrolling I-22. 

According to reports from WMBA-TV, a lawsuit filed in federal court argues that tickets written by officers along I-22 were unlawful. 

โ€œBrookside is a poster child for policing for profit,โ€ Carla Crowder, Alabama Appleseed Center for Law & Justice director, told AL.com. โ€œWe are not safer because of it.โ€

Complaints about the Brookside police had been made to Jefferson County Sheriff Mark Pettway. 

โ€œWe get calls about Brookside quite regularly because they go outside their jurisdiction to stop people,โ€ Pettway told AL.com. โ€œMost of the time people get stopped, theyโ€™re going to get a ticket. And theyโ€™re saying they were nowhere near Brookside.โ€

Jones allegedly defended himself on Facebook to Alabama state senator candidate Lisa Ward.

โ€œI strongly suggest you take the time to research the truth of the story before posting comments,โ€ Jones supposedly messaged Ward. โ€œEspecially if you expect to run for public office [in] the state of Alabama.โ€

Jonesโ€™s resignation is sufficient but does not rectify a more significant issue, said Leah Nelson, research director at Alabama Appleseed Center

The former police chief โ€œis just a symptom of the problem,โ€ Nelson told AL.com. โ€œAs long as criminal justice policy and tax policy is intertwined, weโ€™ll see versions of Brookside pop up. We need policy reform.โ€