Skip to content
Apply
Stories

Connecticut State Police issued 26,000 fake traffic tickets over eight years, according to an audit by a Northeastern researcher

People in this story

Connecticut State Police submitted at least 26,000 fake traffic tickets from 2014 and 2021, according to the findings of a recent audit of the department’s records.

The audit, conducted by Matt Ross, an associate professor of public policy and economics at Northeastern University, and Ken Barone from the University of Connecticut, revealed that 387 troopers and constables had submitted thousands of fake tickets. Ross estimates that the total number of fake tickets could be as high as 58,533, although only 26,000 tickets were verified to have no actual recorded traffic stop associated with them.

The fake tickets made state troopers and constables seem more productive, putting them in line for certain perks and promotions. The thousands of false records also distorted the state’s racial profiling traffic stop data, making it appear that state police were ticketing more white drivers.

Continue reading at Northeastern Global News.

More Stories

Are bans on homeless encampments, sleeping outside ‘cruel and unusual’? Policy experts discuss Supreme Court case

04.23.2024

Will the US ban the use of single-use plastics like England, India, Hong Kong and other countries?

04.23.2024

Op-Ed: Keeping our Eyes on the Farm Bill

04.23.24
All Stories