Getting pulled over in Texas is stressful. But knowing your rights makes all the difference.
The law: 4th Amendment + Texas Constitution Article 1, Section 9 + Texas Code of Criminal Procedure 38.23
What police CAN do during a traffic stop:
- Ask for license, registration, and proof of insurance
- Run your plates and ID for warrants
- Use a drug-sniffing dog IF it doesn't unreasonably extend the stop (Rodriguez v. United States, 2015)
- Order you to step out of the vehicle (Pennsylvania v. Mimms)
What police CANNOT do without consent or probable cause:
- Search your car, trunk, or containers inside the car
- Search your phone (Riley v. California, 2014 — requires a warrant)
- Detain you beyond the time reasonably needed for the traffic stop
- Use your refusal to consent as probable cause
The magic words: "Officer, I do not consent to a search."
- Say it clearly and calmly
- You are NOT being difficult — you are exercising a constitutional right
- If they search anyway, anything found may be suppressed under Texas exclusionary rule (CCP 38.23)
Texas-specific protections:
- Texas CCP 38.23 is STRONGER than the federal exclusionary rule
- In Texas, illegally obtained evidence is AUTOMATICALLY excluded — no "good faith" exception like federal courts
- This means if a cop searches your car illegally, NOTHING found can be used against you in a Texas court
Source: Texas Constitution Art. 1 Sec. 9, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure 38.23, Rodriguez v. US (2015), Riley v. California (2014)
Know your rights. Be respectful. Be firm.
Got pulled over on 635 last month. Officer asked to search my car. I said no respectfully. He was annoyed but let me go. Know your rights.