RI Leader Who Lead Fight to Re-Open Davey Lopes Pool, Stopped for “Driving While Black”

Kate Nagle, GoLocal News Editor

RI Leader Who Lead Fight to Re-Open Davey Lopes Pool, Stopped for “Driving While Black”

Photo by Metts
Leah Metts, the woman who led the fight to overcome Providence politics and force the reopening of the Davey Lopes Pool in South Providence, tells GoLocal that she was profiled by Coventry Police and stopped for “driving while black.”

In 2014, top women’s fashion magazine Glamour magazine named her a "Hometown Heroes: 50 Phenomenal Women of the Year Who Are Making a Difference."

And GoLocal named her one of the “13 Who Made a Difference in 2013.”

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But, in 2017, she claims she was stopped because of her race and treated aggressively by Coventry Police.

“The both cops were gung-ho but the second was the worst. He was so nasty and all he could talk about was my music. Then said I was speeding. I was playing Biggie Smalls on the radio, with all 4 windows down. Me being brown and playing rap music was the real problem,” Metts told GoLocal on Wednesday.

Leah Metts
Coventry Police Chief John MacDonald tells GoLocal, “I talked to my patrol captain who spoke with the officers a few minutes ago. Mrs. Metts was pulled over for going 42 mph in a 25 mph zone and given a warning for speeding. We have had numerous complaints of speeding on Blackrock Road and Gervais Street so we recently initiated some enforcement activities in that area."

Metts said, “I was so afraid for my life and then my son came running out of the house I thought they were gonna kill him because both of the hands were on their guns.

“I told them I was too afraid to get my registration and my license because I was afraid for my life. And I told him I was on the Providence Police advisory board and that I did nothing wrong and asked what did I do,” said Metts.

But, the Chief Mac Donald tells GoLocal that the stopped was in response to an ongoing problem in the area, “Today, those two officers did a stationary traffic enforcement post in the area and Mrs. Metts was one of four vehicles stopped over a period of time.  There were two officers on scene because one is a Field Training Officer who is training the other who is a new officer.”

“They both turned away and left no record, no ticket, nothing - harassment and its finest. But it's not the first time for my family. Why did they harass me with their hands on their guns? I am so sad about this,” said Metts.


Male African American Leaders in RI - 2015

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