<<<not a jumping frog
<<<not a jumping frog
<<<not a jumping frog
No this sounds perfectly logical, the south is strange to us from the northeast., especially if we come from a small town and everyone is related to each other.
Cops in a small town know everyone down to their grandparents and when an out of town is hired to the Force they fill them in on who is who and what is what.
A big city in the south with a good mixture of races, people moving in and out only get to know the criminals they come across. So with no idea who these people are they tend to get suspicious of everyone for any reason.
Now as I understand it, this Black man was driving a female White coworker home when stopped. We have no idea if this part of town was all White and this was unusual to see a Black Man in the neighborhood with a White woman in the car. Cops do look for the unusual and get curious.
I was stopped in Tenn. I had taken a Black young man to the Mall for Xmas shopping and on the way home a town Cop never having seen me before with out of state plates got curious. Can't blame him, they say that every 10 cars they pull over there is something illegal going on and in this Rebel country an out of state car with a blond driving a Black man around was reason enough to get his antenna up.
The cop was confused, my plates were from VA. but I spoke with a Yankee accent. The kid a neighbor of mine was pissing his pants, he knew how the South worked and I did not.
I explained I had come south to help out on my in laws farm and my passenger was a neighbor and needed a ride. I came from the State of Maine down to Va. and on to Tenn. The thing that sold him on my story was my Down East accent, that settled the Cops curiosity.
Yup, Cops the good ones that is, get curious about anything that seems out of place or unusual. When this poster says he turned his inside light on to read something at a stop light, in the dark that will call attention to him and give wonder to anyone---Why the heck is he doing that.