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No. 10646871
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
United States v. Keith Moore
No. 10646871 · Decided August 1, 2025
No. 10646871·Fourth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Decided
August 1, 2025
Citation
No. 10646871
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
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PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 24-4201
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff - Appellant,
v.
KEITH RODNEY MOORE,
Defendant - Appellee.
--------------------------------------------------------
NATIONAL POLICE ACCOUNTABILITY PROJECT; JULIAN; AMERICAN
CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDATION; AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES
UNION FOUNDDATION OF VIRGINIA; RICHMOND TRANSPARENCY AND
ACCOUNTABILITY PROJECT,
Amici Supporting Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at
Richmond. John A. Gibney, Jr., Senior District Judge. (3:21-cr-00042-JAG-1)
Argued: March 14, 2025 Decided: August 1, 2025
Before NIEMEYER, HARRIS, and BERNER, Circuit Judges.
Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Judge Niemeyer wrote the opinion, in
which Judge Harris and Judge Berner joined.
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ARGUED: Jacqueline Romy Bechara, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES
ATTORNEY, Alexandria, Virginia, for Appellant. Rohiniyurie Tashima, GOODWIN
PROCTER, LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Jessica D. Aber, United
States Attorney, Shea M. Gibbons, Assistant United States Attorney, Erik S. Siebert,
Assistant United States Attorney, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY,
Richmond, Virginia, for Appellant. Patrick L. Bryant, Alexandria, Virginia, Laura J.
Koenig, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER, Richmond, Virginia; Brian
T. Burgess, Kaley Preciado, GOODWIN PROCTER LLP, Washington, D.C., for
Appellee. Lauren Bonds, Keisha James Eliana Machefsky, Devontae W. Torriente,
NATIONAL POLICE ACCOUNTABILITY PROJECT, Kansas City, Kansas; Jill Collen
Jefferson, JULIAN, Hattiesburg, Mississippi, for Amici National Police Accountability
Project and JULIAN. Geri Greenspan, Eden B. Heilman, AMERICAN CIVIL
LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDATION OF VIRGINIA, Richmond, Virginia; Jenn Rolnick
Borchetta, Brandon Buskey, AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDATION,
New York, New York, for Amici American Civil Liberties Union Foundation and
American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Virginia. Maisie Osteen, LEGAL AID
JUSTICE CENTER, Richmond, Virginia, for Amicus Richmond Transparency and
Accountability Project.
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NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:
The district court dismissed Keith Moore’s indictment for the illegal possession of
a firearm because, as it found, the traffic stop leading to Moore’s arrest was made because
Moore was Black. The government appeals.
When Richmond, Virginia, police officers observed a vehicle with the temporary
license tag number 11134Y, they concluded that it was a fake tag because, within the
preceding hours, they had stopped two other vehicles with the identical temporary tag
number. The officers activated the lights on their patrol car to institute a stop, but the
driver, Keith Moore, failed to stop and instead fled, running several stop signs before
crashing into a curb. Moore then exited the vehicle, leaving the engine running and the
door open, and ran on foot. After the officers caught and detained him, they observed a
gun on the floorboard of Moore’s vehicle. Following a records check that revealed that
Moore had previously been convicted of a felony, they arrested him for the illegal
possession of a firearm. A federal grand jury subsequently indicted Moore for violation of
18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1).
Moore filed a motion to suppress, contending that the traffic stop had violated his
Fourth Amendment rights and that the officers interrogated him in violation of his Miranda
rights. During a hearing on the motion, Moore presented evidence that all traffic stops
made that day by the officers who arrested him were made in predominantly Black
neighborhoods, suggesting that the police had targeted him because he was Black, in
violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
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The court authorized further investigation and briefing, and after conducting several
hearings and receiving testimony from both parties, including expert testimony, it
dismissed Moore’s indictment on the ground that it was the product of selective law
enforcement against Black drivers. While the court found that the police officers had
probable cause to stop Moore and that there was no evidence of their “invidious or bad
faith,” it nonetheless relied on statistical evidence that Black drivers were 5.13 times more
likely to be stopped in Richmond than White drivers, viewed in the context of Richmond’s
history of racial discrimination, to conclude that Moore had “successfully shown both the
discriminatory effect and discriminatory purpose elements required for [a] selective
enforcement claim.”
After a thorough examination of the record, we conclude that the evidence was
insufficient to show that Moore’s stop and arrest were the product of racially discriminatory
purpose, in violation of the Equal Protection Clause. Accordingly, we reverse and remand
with instructions to reinstate the indictment.
I
A
While on patrol on December 5, 2020, in the Fourth Precinct of Richmond, Virginia,
four officers with the Richmond Police Department encountered three different cars
displaying the same temporary tag number, 11134Y. The officers were members of the
Fourth Precinct’s Focus Mission Team, a unit whose primary goal was getting guns and
drugs off the streets of Richmond.
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First, at approximately 5:45 p.m., the officers stopped a white Cadillac sedan
because its headlights were off. During the stop, the officers asked the driver whether he
had any weapons or drugs in the car, shined flashlights throughout the car, and patted down
the front-seat passenger after he had exited the car. When the officers entered the vehicle’s
temporary tag number, 11134Y, into a database, the database failed to return a result,
indicating that the tag was fake. The driver then volunteered to park the car rather than
continuing to drive it, but the officers let him go on his way with a warning.
About an hour later, the same officers stopped a second car displaying a temporary
tag with the same number, 11134Y. One of the officers asked the driver about her tag and
informed her that another car had been displaying a license tag with the same number. The
officers nonetheless believed her explanation and also let her go on her way.
Yet a few hours later, at around 9:45 p.m., the officers observed a white Chrysler
300 pull out from a gas station and abruptly stop when the driver saw the officers’ vehicle.
One of the officers observed that the car had a temporary license tag, again with the same
number, 11134Y, that they had now seen twice before on other vehicles. The officers
activated the lights on the patrol car to initiate a stop, but this driver failed to stop. Instead,
he fled, running several stop signs before crashing into a curb. The driver then exited his
car, leaving it running and the door open, and ran on foot. The officers chased him down
and detained him. When they observed a gun on the floorboard of the car and determined
that the driver, Keith Moore, had previously been convicted of a felony, they arrested him.
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A federal grand jury returned an indictment charging Moore in one count with
possession of a firearm after having been convicted of a felony, in violation of 18 U.S.C.
§ 922(g)(1).
B
Moore filed a motion to suppress, arguing that the traffic stop violated his Fourth
Amendment rights and that the officers impermissibly interrogated him before and after
providing him with Miranda warnings. The suppression motion also noted that the
neighborhood where Moore was arrested had “almost exclusively black residents” and
claimed that the officers with the Fourth Precinct’s Focus Mission Team had been “looking
for traffic infractions that night in hopes that the traffic stops” would reveal evidence of
more serious crimes.
The district court held an evidentiary hearing on Moore’s motion in July 2021, and
the government presented testimony from the four officers involved in the stop, as well as
two others who had assisted their pursuit of Moore. Moore also presented evidence that
the Focus Mission Team had conducted traffic stops on the day of his arrest exclusively in
a predominantly Black neighborhood and that Black drivers were, on average, pulled over
more frequently than White drivers. At the conclusion of the hearing, Moore requested an
opportunity to submit supplemental briefing, and the district court granted the request.
In his supplemental brief, Moore argued for the first time that the indictment should
be dismissed because the police officers had violated his Fourteenth Amendment right to
equal protection by targeting him and other Black residents of the Fourth Precinct, using
pretextual traffic stops to search their cars. While Moore acknowledged that he had to
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show, in order to state a selective-enforcement claim under the Equal Protection Clause,
that the officers’ action had a discriminatory effect and was motivated by a discriminatory
purpose (quoting United States v. Mason, 774 F.3d 824, 829 (4th Cir. 2014)), he contended
that he had satisfied both prongs. He argued first that the vast disparity in the rates at which
the Richmond Police Department stopped Black drivers as opposed to White drivers
constituted evidence of a “discriminatory effect on black drivers in Richmond,” and
second, that “[t]he stark numbers and heavy-handed policing . . . of minority neighborhoods
in Richmond” justified “an inference of discriminatory intent.” The government responded
to the supplemental brief, arguing that Moore’s selective-enforcement claim was untimely
and that, in any event, his evidence fell “far short of [the] high standard for proving racially
animated selective law enforcement.”
At a hearing following this briefing, the court suggested that Moore’s motion should
be expanded and that “a more fulsome examination of the statistical data” would be helpful.
It directed Moore to consult with an expert.
Moore thereafter retained Dr. Eli Coston, an assistant professor in the Department
of Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies at Virginia Commonwealth University. Dr.
Coston prepared a report analyzing traffic stops that the Richmond Police Department
conducted from July 1, 2020, through December 6, 2020. Those data, which had been
collected pursuant to the Virginia Community Policing Act, indicated that of the 2,500
relevant traffic stops conducted in Richmond, 77% involved Black drivers, while 14.16%
involved White drivers. Based on those numbers, Dr. Coston concluded that “Black drivers
were 5.13 times more likely to be stopped” than White drivers. The data, according to Dr.
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Coston, also revealed a “somewhat weak” but still “important” relationship between race
and the likelihood of being pulled over, as well as the eventual outcome of a given stop.
Dr. Coston noted, however, that the report could not determine whether any “specific
traffic stop was the result of racial bias or racial profiling.”
Dr. Coston also prepared a set of maps that examined the racial demographics of the
areas of Richmond where traffic stops were most frequently conducted. Based on the
maps, Dr. Coston stated that the stops of Black drivers were more likely to be clustered
near one another, while the stops of White drivers were “distributed throughout the city
and less likely to show as clusters.” In addition, the few clusters of White-driver stops that
existed occurred in predominantly White neighborhoods, whereas the clusters of Black-
driver stops were “distributed throughout the city” and not limited to majority-Black
neighborhoods.
In addition to Dr. Coston, Moore also retained a second expert, Dr. Marvin Chiles,
an Assistant Professor of African American History at Old Dominion University. Dr.
Chiles prepared a report in which he detailed the history of racial segregation in Richmond,
focusing on the period from 1865 through the 1980s. He noted that although “[a]
combination of federal law and local activism [had] helped curb systemic residential
segregation between the 1960s and 1980s,” the stain of Richmond’s segregated past
“remains etched into the city’s landscape,” with most “working-class and underclass blacks
[still living] in racially homogenous enclaves in Richmond.” Dr. Chiles also described
how the Richmond Police Department had targeted and overpoliced Black citizens over
the years. He noted, for example, that an effort to revitalize downtown Richmond in the
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1980s led to the development of a “new police strategy, as dictated by black political
leaders,” of increased “policing of black neighborhoods.” Dr. Chiles’s report contained no
relevant information specific to the Richmond Police Department that post-dated 1989.
The government retained its own expert, Dr. Michael Smith, a professor of
criminology and criminal justice at the University of Texas at San Antonio, who challenged
Dr. Coston’s statistical analysis. In his report, Dr. Smith stated that Dr. Coston’s
conclusions were “unsupported by the data and analysis” and relied “upon elementary
statistical techniques that no experienced social scientist familiar with racial disparity
research in policing would rely on to draw inferences of bias.” He explained that
“examining the raw percentages of drivers stopped by race is meaningless unless, at a
minimum, those percentages can be compared against an estimate of the population of
drivers in the jurisdiction of interest” and that, in addition, “the population of persons who
live in an area often serves as a poor representation of persons who drive in an area or who
are at risk for being stopped by the police.” Dr. Smith also critiqued Dr. Coston for using
statistical methods that could not control for confounding variables like poverty or
residence in a high-crime area, noting that “[p]olice typically deploy more officers to
neighborhoods with higher crime rates” and that such “police deployment variables often
correlate with race and ethnicity in America’s urban neighborhoods.”
The district court held an evidentiary hearing on Moore’s selective-enforcement
claim on July 18 and 19, 2022, and again on October 28, 2022, to admit additional
evidence. While on the stand, Dr. Coston testified that “when we look at large scale
patterns what we can say is whether or not Black people are disproportionately stopped at
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higher rates [and] disproportionately experience adverse outcomes when they are stopped.”
But Dr. Coston clarified, “I am not making conclusions about [the] causation” of the
disparity and certainly not opining that “Mr. Moore was stopped because he was an
African-American.”
C
After conducting these numerous hearings, the district court issued two
memorandum opinions. In the first, dated November 13, 2023, the court granted in part
and denied in part Moore’s motion to suppress. The court denied Moore’s Fourth
Amendment claim, noting that “Moore’s temporary tags had the same number as those of
two other drivers the officers had stopped that night” and explaining that “[b]ecause the
officers suspected Moore had violated a traffic law,” they were legally justified in stopping
Moore’s vehicle. With respect to Moore’s Miranda claim, the court held that some
statements should be suppressed but that others could be admitted.
But in the second opinion, dated February 12, 2024, the district court granted
Moore’s motion to dismiss the indictment for selective enforcement in violation of the
Equal Protection Clause, concluding that Moore had adequately supported his contention
that Richmond Police Department “officers selectively stop Black people, and that this
selective enforcement led to his current charges.” The court began by denying motions
filed by the government to exclude the testimony of Dr. Coston and Dr. Chiles. It then
turned to the merits, stating: “Moore must prove, by a preponderance of the evidence,” that
the Richmond Police Department’s “enforcement process ‘had a discriminatory effect and
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that it was motivated by a discriminatory purpose.’” (Quoting Cent. Radio Co. v. City of
Norfolk, 811 F.3d 625, 634–35 (4th Cir. 2016)).
The court found that the testimony of Moore’s expert witnesses established that the
Richmond Police Department’s traffic stops produce a discriminatory effect, stating that
“[t]he statistics provided in this case make abundantly clear the disparate impact of traffic
stops on Black drivers in Richmond.” And the court determined that the same evidence
sufficed to show discriminatory purpose as well. It acknowledged that “Moore ha[d]
presented no evidence of the four officers’ invidious or bad faith,” observing that the
officers had, rather, “pulled Moore over for having suspicious temporary tags.” But the
court concluded that it could still infer discriminatory purpose from “(1) evidence of a
consistent pattern of actions by the Richmond Police Department that disparately impacts
Black drivers in Richmond; and (2) the history of discrimination by the Richmond Police
Department and in Richmond itself.” (Cleaned up). The court emphasized that “Moore’s
statistics evince that [Richmond Police Department] police officers stop Black drivers at a
rate that far exceeds the rate at which they stop white drivers.” And it observed that Moore
had supported his claim with evidence of “Richmond’s racially segregated and
discriminatory history.” This evidence included the fact that three of Richmond’s four
police precincts “overlap Black neighborhoods,” while a fourth “aligns exactly with the
boundaries of the white section of Richmond.”
In sum, the court found that “[t]he data showing that [the Richmond Police
Department] stops Black drivers five times as often as it stops white drivers, coupled with
the evidence of Richmond’s history of discrimination, reveals that [the Richmond Police
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Department’s] discriminatory purpose contributed to its officers’ decision to stop Moore.”
Thus, it held that Moore had established that the Richmond police had selectively enforced
traffic laws against Black drivers, including Moore himself, in violation of the Equal
Protection Clause. On that basis, it dismissed the indictment against him.
The government filed a motion for reconsideration, arguing that the court had
improperly inferred that the Richmond Police Department “had orchestrated an
intentionally discriminatory campaign to stop more Black drivers” and that “the practical
effect of [its] opinion may well be to discourage [the Richmond Police Department] . . .
from actively policing the most violent areas of our City.” The district court denied the
government’s motion, explaining that it had “dismissed this case because the evidence
showed that [Richmond Police Department] officers disproportionately pull over Black
drivers” and declaring that “[t]he time has come for this practice to end.”
From the district court’s order dismissing the indictment dated February 12, 2024,
and order denying the government’s motion for reconsideration dated March 11, 2024, the
government filed this appeal.
II
The sole issue before us is whether Moore provided sufficient evidence to show that
his traffic stop and arrest on December 5, 2020, were the result of racially selective law
enforcement, in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The Equal Protection Clause “prohibits selective enforcement of the law based on
considerations such as race.” Whren v. United States, 517 U.S. 806, 813 (1996). In Whren,
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the Supreme Court acknowledged that a constitutional violation would occur were “police
officers [to] decide which motorists to stop based on decidedly impermissible factors, such
as the race of the car’s occupants.” Id. at 810. It made clear that “the constitutional basis
for objecting to intentionally discriminatory application of laws is the Equal Protection
Clause, not the Fourth Amendment.” Id. at 813. It is now well established that to prevail
on such a claim, a claimant must prove both (1) that the officers’ enforcement had a
discriminatory effect and (2) that it was motivated by discriminatory purpose. See United
States v. Mason, 774 F.3d 824, 829 (4th Cir. 2014) (quoting United States v. Armstrong,
517 U.S. 456, 465 (1996)); United States v. Hare, 820 F.3d 93, 98–99 (4th Cir. 2016).
We have held selective-enforcement claims to a demanding standard of proof
because such claims “ask a court to exercise judicial power over a special province of the
Executive.” Mason, 774 F.3d at 829–30 (cleaned up). Inasmuch as such a claim poses
“the great danger of unnecessarily impairing the performance of a core executive
constitutional function,” the party bringing the claim “must demonstrate clear evidence of
racially animated selective law enforcement. This standard is intended to be a demanding
and rigorous one.” Id. at 830 (emphasis added) (cleaned up); see also Hare, 820 F.3d at
98–99.
In sum, Moore must carry the burden of showing, by clear evidence, that his traffic
stop had a discriminatory effect and was motivated by a discriminatory purpose or intent.
The government contends that Moore failed to carry his burden as to both prongs.
It focuses mainly, however, on Moore’s failure to show discriminatory purpose in making
the stop. Noting the lack of evidence that race played any role in Moore’s traffic stop, the
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government argues that the statistical evidence that Moore presented was insufficient to
overcome that evidentiary gap. It claims that the statistical evidence lacked an appropriate
benchmark for comparison between Black and White drivers and that Moore’s historical
evidence left off in 1989, making it irrelevant to a stop conducted in 2020. The government
reasons that to conclude that the statistical evidence presented in this case was sufficient to
overcome the lack of evidence of discriminatory intent “would mean that any Black driver
stopped by [a Richmond Police Department] officer could prove discriminatory purpose
based on the exact same statistical and historical evidence, regardless of the actual motives
of the officer who stopped his car.” The consequence would be to jeopardize the ability of
Richmond Police Department officers to enforce traffic laws against Black drivers in
Richmond.
Moore defends the district court’s decision, pointing to the substantial
“circumstantial evidence” that he was stopped pretextually and “on the basis of his race.”
He points to the practices of the Fourth Precinct’s Focus Mission Team in patrolling
predominantly Black neighborhoods and in habitually employing pretextual stops as an
excuse to ferret out more serious crimes, like gun and drug offenses. Additionally, he
highlights the statistical evidence that showed that while Black and White residents each
make up roughly one-half of Richmond’s population, Black drivers were the subject of
77% of the traffic stops and thus were “5.13 times more likely to be stopped” than White
drivers. Finally, Moore contends that the history of discrimination in Richmond supplies
important context through which to understand the statistical evidence.
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We begin with the main issue that the government has presented, whether the
evidence showed that the Richmond police officers who stopped Moore were motivated by
a discriminatory purpose, i.e., whether they had racial animus. This requires proof “that
the decisionmaker . . . selected or reaffirmed a particular course of action at least in part
‘because of,’ not merely ‘in spite of,’ its adverse effects upon an identifiable group.” Pers.
Adm’r of Mass. v. Feeney, 442 U.S. 256, 279 (1979); see also Hare, 820 F.3d at 100 n.6.
Since the officers as individuals, and not the Richmond Police Department, made the
decision to stop Moore, it is the officers’ motivation that must be examined. Indeed, Moore
only challenges their decision to stop his car and not any police department policy or order.
See McCleskey v. Kemp, 481 U.S. 279, 292–93 (1987) (“[T]o prevail under the Equal
Protection Clause, [a party] must prove that the decisionmakers in his case acted with
discriminatory purpose”).
The evidence shows that when the officers observed a vehicle bearing a temporary
license tag with the number 11134Y, they had probable cause to believe that the tag was
fake because they had stopped two other vehicles with the same temporary tag number
only hours before. No one disputes that knowingly displaying a fake license tag violates
the law. See Va. Code Ann. § 46.2-612(B)(1). And while the officers merely gave
warnings to the first two drivers whom they had stopped, Moore’s circumstances were
different. Moore did not stop when required to do so, but rather fled. Following a car
chase, Moore crashed into a curb and abandoned his car, leaving his door open and engine
running and thus enabling the officers to see a gun lying on the floorboard. No aspect of
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this sequence suggests that race played a role in the decision to initiate the traffic stop or
to arrest Moore for the illegal possession of a gun.
In light of this evidence, the district court appropriately found that the officers had
probable cause to stop Moore and that there was no evidence that they made their decision
based on race. The court stated, “Moore has presented no evidence of the four officers’
invidious or bad faith.” Indeed, based on its review of video footage of the traffic stop, the
court observed that “the police essentially treated him with great respect.”
Based on these facts of record and the district court’s finding, we conclude that there
is a complete absence of evidence that the officers acted with discriminatory purpose. And
because Moore’s equal protection claim requires clear evidence that he was stopped
because he was Black, it should fail for that reason alone.
The district court, however, did not limit its analysis to the question whether Moore
was stopped because of his race. It chose to consider circumstantial evidence relating to
police stops in Richmond more generally, remarking that “there is a problem in Virginia
that needs to be addressed.” The court thus undertook to treat Moore’s motion as a
programmatic challenge to the fairness of traffic stops made by the Richmond Police
Department. And in doing so, the court drew on its personal observations:
[Y]ou know, I have been sitting up here now for ten years looking at these
cases and I have never had a case with a white driver. Never in ten years. . . .
And when I drive in other places in the City, I frequently see stops with young
African-American men standing outside their cars. And I just think it is an
intolerable situation. It is intolerable that the City puts up with it.
With these observations, the court lamented, “One would think that Virginia’s citizens
would cry out in protest over this situation, but they don’t.” Consequently, the court
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announced, “The time has come for this practice to end.” Thus, despite finding no evidence
of racial animus on the part of the police officers who stopped Moore, the court invited
Moore to present more generalized evidence about traffic stops in Richmond, and based on
Moore’s statistical and historical evidence, it found that the Richmond Police Department
acted with a racially discriminatory purpose. Evaluating that evidence rather uncritically,
the court explained:
Moore’s statistics evince that RPD police officers stop Black drivers at a rate
that far exceeds the rate at which they stop white drivers. This correlation,
on its own, does not prove causation. But that does not mean evidence of a
correlation is per se irrelevant.
* * *
In analyzing the statistics in this case, Dr. Coston never asserted that race
caused a particular stop. Instead, Dr. Coston determined the relationship
between a driver’s race and the primary result of a traffic stop.
* * *
To further support his claim, Moore cites to Richmond’s racially segregated
and discriminatory history. . . . Dr. Chiles testified that the historical
segregation of the City of Richmond is the product of “the tide of history.”
* * *
The data showing that RPD stops Black drivers five times as often as it stops
white drivers, coupled with the evidence of Richmond’s history of
discrimination, reveals that RPD’s discriminatory purpose contributed to its
officers’ decision to stop Moore. Moore therefore succeeds in meeting his
burden of showing discriminatory purpose.
(Citation omitted).
We conclude that the court’s expansion of the inquiry was unjustified by the
evidence and that the evidence, even if taken at face value, was insufficient to show a
discriminatory purpose — on the part of either the arresting officers or the Richmond
Police Department as a whole.
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First, the statistical evidence concerning the relationship between race and the
likelihood of a traffic stop was not strong. Dr. Coston described the relationship between
the variables, as indicated by results of statistical analyses known as chi-square tests, as
“important” but “somewhat weak.” Moreover, the disparities themselves did not paint a
materially different picture. While the fact that Black drivers constituted 77% of the drivers
stopped in Richmond may have been striking at first blush, the figure represented only a
naked statistical disparity, and both this court and the Supreme Court have declined to infer
a violation of the Equal Protection Clause from statistical disparities far starker than any
presented here. See, e.g., Feeney, 442 U.S. at 270 (98% of those eligible for a benefit were
men); Armstrong, 517 U.S. at 459 (100% of the office’s 24 drug conspiracy prosecutions
closed in a given year involved Black defendants); Hare, 820 F.3d at 99 (100% of
defendants prosecuted in stash-house sting cases in Maryland were Black); United States
v. Venable, 666 F.3d 893, 903 (4th Cir. 2012) (87% of defendants charged with specific
firearm offenses in a division were Black); United States v. Olvis, 97 F.3d 739, 742 (4th
Cir. 1996) (more than 90% of those indicted in the area for crack cocaine trafficking were
Black). Although statistical disparities might bear some relevance to a broader question,
they generally cannot, as Dr. Coston conceded, show that any one decision was motivated
by racial animus. Thus, a finding of discriminatory intent or purpose based solely on naked
statistical disparities “remains the exceedingly rare exception to the general rule.” United
States v. Thorpe, 471 F.3d 652, 661 (6th Cir. 2006); see also Olvis, 97 F.3d at 746 (noting
the “general rule” that statistical evidence is inadequate to prove discriminatory purpose in
cases implicating “discretionary judgments essential to the criminal justice process”
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(cleaned up)). Yet, the district court relied mainly on this naked statistical disparity to
conclude that Moore was stopped because he was Black.
Second, the basis on which Dr. Coston compared White and Black drivers was also
weak. While Dr. Coston compared the frequency with which drivers of each race were
stopped in a 6-month window in 2020, this type of data could say little about whether any
specific driver was stopped because he was Black, in part because Dr. Coston provided no
data about the proportion of drivers in Richmond who were Black. Thus, if one were to
show, hypothetically, that 65% of the drivers stopped in Jonesville were Black when 65%
of the drivers in Jonesville were Black, the 65%-of-drivers-stopped statistic establishes
nothing, because there is no disparity. We have repeatedly noted that “raw data” lacking
“an appropriate basis for comparison” cannot satisfy any element of an Equal Protection
claim. Olvis, 97 F.3d at 745; accord Hare, 820 F.3d at 99–100; Venable, 666 F.3d at 903.
And we have specifically disclaimed reliance on statistics that fail to account for “the
number of blacks who were actually committing [a specific type of crime] or whether a
greater percentage of whites could have been prosecuted for such crimes.” Olvis, 97 F.3d
at 745. To be sure, we have noted that the absence of an appropriate benchmark is not
necessarily dispositive with respect to selective-enforcement claims, mindful that such
claims are not as conducive to data retention as are selective-prosecution claims. See Hare,
820 F.3d at 100–01. But the lack of any sound basis for comparison still weighs against
finding clear evidence of animus in this case. See Mason, 774 F.3d at 830.
Third, the potential for recognized confounding variables to distort the relationship
between race and traffic stops greatly undermined the probative value of Dr. Coston’s
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statistical evidence. Statistics can shed light on the presence of “discriminatory intent if
race can be isolated from other confounding variables.” Conley v. United States, 5 F.4th
781, 796 (7th Cir. 2021) (emphasis added). But Dr. Coston acknowledged that the
statistical test applied, unlike other available methods, could not control for confounding
variables, such as poverty, residence in a high-crime area of town, and existing arrest
warrants. That lack of control may not be dispositive in every case, but it is particularly
damaging here, where evidence in the record suggested that the Richmond Police
Department’s traffic stops tended to cluster in high-crime areas, and further evidence
indicated that controlling for confounding variables has, in some studies, made racial
disparities in traffic-stop outcomes “disappear[].”
Finally, the existence of probable cause to stop Moore makes it even less likely that
the traffic stop was motivated by discriminatory purpose. As we have noted, there is a
conceptual “overlap” between Fourth Amendment claims and selective-enforcement
challenges. Mason, 774 F.3d at 831. When an officer has probable cause to effect a stop,
particularly for an unusual and glaring traffic offense such as the one at issue here, we do
not think it inevitable or even likely that the officer’s first thought will concern the race of
the suspect, as opposed to, for instance, the offense transpiring before his eyes. Thus,
where, as here, officers have probable cause to stop a defendant, it is “even less likely” the
defendant’s selective-enforcement claim could succeed. Id. This is particularly so when
the record is devoid of any evidence revealing “significant departures from normal
procedures,” which might, if present, suggest that the existence of probable cause was not
the actual motive for the stop. See Cent. Radio Co., 811 F.3d at 635 (quoting Sylvia Dev.
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Corp. v. Calvert County, 48 F.3d 810, 819 (4th Cir. 1995)). Here, the officers observed
three cars bearing identical temporary license tag numbers in one night, giving them cause
to believe that the drivers were knowingly displaying fake tags, in violation of Virginia
Code § 46.2-612(B)(1). The officers thus attempted to stop each of the three cars to
question the driver about the tag. This sequence of events is striking only for its normalcy.
Indeed, we expect that the public would be surprised had the officers not stopped Moore
in the circumstances presented.
For all these reasons, we conclude that Moore’s statistical evidence fails to show, to
any degree, that the officers who stopped Moore acted with discriminatory purpose.
Moore nonetheless argues that “the historical evidence Dr. Chiles proffered
provides additional evidentiary support of discriminatory purpose by providing the
historical context in which the statistical evidence should be understood.” But Moore’s
historical evidence failed to tether past discrimination to this case at all. Indeed, the
evidence that he presented does not even broach the 21st century; Dr. Chiles candidly
admitted that he did not have any evidence “[b]eyond 1989” regarding the relationship
between racial bias and the Richmond Police Department’s practices. This concession
renders Dr. Chiles’s testimony virtually irrelevant. As the Supreme Court has observed,
“[U]nless historical evidence is reasonably contemporaneous with the challenged
decision” — here, the decision to stop Moore — “it has little probative value.” McCleskey,
481 U.S. at 298 n.20 (emphasis added).
In short, because Moore has challenged a single decision that the district court
recognized was not animated by racial prejudice, it is difficult to see the relevance of the
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expert testimony offered by Moore to the issue at hand, especially when that testimony
concededly did not point to the reason why the officers stopped Moore. Moreover, were
we to accept that the data presented by the expert witnesses were sufficient to dismiss
Moore’s indictment, those same data would, without more, justify dismissing every
prosecution arising from the traffic stop of a Black person in Richmond. Such a notion is
untenable.
* * *
In addressing Moore’s selective-enforcement claim, the district court should have
remained focused on whether Moore was stopped on December 5, 2020, because he was
Black. The court, however, out of a more general concern about discriminatory law
enforcement in Richmond, invited the inquiry to transform into a broad investigation into
the Richmond Police Department’s traffic enforcement practices of a kind more suited for
a legislative committee. While we do not dismiss the court’s larger concern, we conclude
that the record in this case did not justify dismissing the indictment against Moore for
selective enforcement. And as Moore failed to introduce evidence sufficient to show that
he was stopped on the basis of race, we need not address his evidence to show
discriminatory effect.
We reverse the order of the district court and remand with instructions to reinstate
the indictment.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
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Plain English Summary
USCA4 Appeal: 24-4201 Doc: 91 Filed: 08/01/2025 Pg: 1 of 22 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
Key Points
01USCA4 Appeal: 24-4201 Doc: 91 Filed: 08/01/2025 Pg: 1 of 22 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
02NATIONAL POLICE ACCOUNTABILITY PROJECT; JULIAN; AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDATION; AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDDATION OF VIRGINIA; RICHMOND TRANSPARENCY AND ACCOUNTABILITY PROJECT, Amici Supporting Appellee.
03(3:21-cr-00042-JAG-1) Argued: March 14, 2025 Decided: August 1, 2025 Before NIEMEYER, HARRIS, and BERNER, Circuit Judges.
04Judge Niemeyer wrote the opinion, in which Judge Harris and Judge Berner joined.
Frequently Asked Questions
USCA4 Appeal: 24-4201 Doc: 91 Filed: 08/01/2025 Pg: 1 of 22 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
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