About that license plate frame...
LiNkIe.
AUSTIN – A quick walk around the Capitol driveway proves that a lot of state leaders and policymakers are, in the eyes of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, lawbreakers. Chances are, you and many of your neighbors are scofflaws, too.
The court ruled this week that covering even the smallest star, space shuttle or cowboy – much less a number or letter – on a vehicle license plate constitutes a Class C misdemeanor under state law.
The statute prohibiting Texans from obscuring a license plate was passed four years ago as an answer to scoundrels who were running toll plazas by using reflective, clear paint on their licenses. The paint made it difficult for the numbers and letters to be seen by cameras or optical readers.
The court, in an 8-1 ruling, recognized that it was an "uncommonly bad law" because it was written broadly and it probably unintentionally made almost anyone with an encasing bracket – from a dealership, university or football team – in violation of the law. But, the judges lamented, it is what it is.
Judge Cathy Cochran described it as, "a 'gotcha' law because it allows the police to arbitrarily stop, ticket, arrest, and search any person who is driving a car whose license plate frame covers up any portion of that plate's design."
::nono::
S.