Plano Cops Make Bitter Divorce Even Worse

On an October night a little more than a year ago, 38-year-old piano player Tray Boswell got off work at an Addison bar around 11 p.m. and headed home to his Plano condo. By that time, his estranged wife, Sarah Boswell, had already made several calls to the cell phone of Plano police officer Michael Kress, who was on duty that night.

Before Boswell reached his home he was pulled over by Kress and asked to step out of the car. Boswell was suspicious. He couldn't recall breaking any traffic law. What's more, he had been pulled over in this same spot—just blocks from his home—by another Plano officer just weeks before. His wife had at least one close friend in the Plano Police Department. Their divorce would become final in just a few weeks, and the fighting over custody of their two children had turned ugly. He wondered if his wife was setting him up.

Boswell says Kress asked him to step out of the car and perform a field sobriety test. When Kress told him he had failed, Boswell says he was shocked. "Which part did I fail?" he says he asked. "All of them," he recalls Kress saying. Boswell was arrested for driving while intoxicated and booked in the Collin County Jail.

Now more than a year later, Tray Boswell has filed a federal lawsuit against Kress and three other Plano police officers, alleging that on two separate occasions they violated his civil rights by pulling him over without probable cause. Boswell believes the officers colluded with his ex-wife to set him up.

"They were doing a favor for a friend," Boswell says. "They just assumed they wouldn't get caught."

The Plano Police Department would not answer questions relating to the lawsuit, nor would Paul Pierce, the attorney who has been hired to represent the four officers. It is not known whether Plano police are conducting an internal investigation into the matter, but what no one denies is that on two occasions Sarah Boswell called the personal cell phone of a Plano police officer who subsequently stopped her then-husband on a traffic violation. In fact, a source close to Sarah Boswell says that on one occasion Boswell told the officer exactly where he should be if he wanted to catch her husband driving drunk.

"Is it illegal for a citizen to call a police officer and report that someone is breaking the law? No, it's not, I've done the same thing," says Phillip Linder, a Dallas attorney who defended Boswell on the DWI charge, which was ultimately dropped. "But that's not what happened here. This wasn't someone calling 911 and reporting that some guy's intoxicated. This was a woman engaged in a bitter custody battle making repeated phone calls over a period of time to Plano police officers trying to set up her husband as a way to establish that he's an alcoholic so she can get custody of the kids.

"The whole thing just smells bad."

While Plano police would not comment on the case because of the pending lawsuit, a source close to the four officers said that on the night Tray Boswell was arrested he smelled of alcohol and an open container of beer was found spilled behind the driver's seat. The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, also said Boswell failed the sobriety test and was taken to jail, where hve refused to take a breath test for blood-alcohol level.

But Linder says none of this is true.

"The key thing here is did they have probable cause? Well, it's easy to say they did because probable cause could be something as simple as crossing the white line. Typically, because probable cause can be challenged in court, an officer will turn on the camera on the dash to establish that the guy is speeding, or that the car was all over the road. But in this case—and the video shows this—they didn't turn the camera on until they had pulled him over."

Linder says the county was moving forward to prosecute the case until he subpoenaed Sarah Boswell's cell phone records, which established that on the night of the arrest she made nine phone calls to Kress' cell phone in a two-hour span. The phone calls begin a half-hour before Tray Boswell was scheduled to get off work and then picked back up at 11:18 p.m., which is about the time Boswell says he got off. Five more phone calls were made before 11:49, which Boswell says is about the time he was pulled over. Then there are two more calls, at 12:51 and 12:57. By that time, Boswell says, he had been booked in jail.

The records also show that when Tray Boswell was pulled over on August 29, his then-wife made four phone calls to the cell phone of Officer Scott Copeland, who conducted the stop. In this case it also appears the calls were made in the minutes before the stop and not long after.

"It's easy to see what happened," Boswell says. "My wife knew what time I was getting off work, and she knew exactly where I would be. Both times I was pulled over right in front of my house. It was clearly a set up."

1 | 2 | Next Page >>
 
  • Eric 07/02/2010 6:45:00 PM

    Britton is a known bully cop. In the town he lives in he boasts of how he is a "Hunter of Men". He has even be accused of stealing hay from a local rancher and when his house burned down while he was on vacation all his personal possessions were not even in his house. He got a nice fat insurance check out of the deal.

  • Simon clark 03/03/2009 4:22:00 PM

    No, the truth is that it neveeer went to jury only hbecause the insane legal system we hold so dear lets the judge rule to the letter of the law i.e. no front license plate which makes everything irrelevant; the fact of conspiracy between the wife and 4 cops --one which she was seeing on the side and others she had dated in the past; were following a man for months in the hopes of arresting him as a favor for a "friend". She should have been drug threw the court system and spent some time in jail for her plotting and messing with the law that's there to protect us from devious minds like hers and her partners in this mess; The fact that the DA and Chief of Police knew what was happening way before it hit the news, and there was no internal investigation tells us how ethical they are in their responsibilities to the people they serve. And why do you think the distriictt judge threw out the DUI if there was any proof that he was drunk. IT was all supposed to be swept unnnder the rug -and it was.

  • Gulch Carter 02/10/2009 12:59:00 AM

    Well it looks like the Dallas Observer has gone off half cocked yet again. You guys just love to pull the trigger on what you perceive to be rampant and/or overt police corruption but you generally get it wrong. This case was thrown out of court by the judge. It had absolutely no merit whatsoever and much of the information in your story here was and remains just flat out wrong. Once the truth was revealed in an actual courtroom this whole stinking mess got tossed out.

  • Bufford T Justice 01/11/2008 9:17:00 PM

    Cops are paid off pigs these days and lazy, in the old days I would have chased him across half a dozen states.

  • Reuben L Owens 01/02/2008 2:50:00 PM

    While reading this story (and many involving DPD and the surrounding counties), I'm reminded of a line from Blade Runner - "If you're not cop, you're little people." *note to columnist: Better watch out!

  • Jellotube 12/15/2007 3:14:00 PM

    I do want to point out that the writer of the story, Jesse Hyde, was wrong on one main point and should correct this. In the story, he wrote a quoate, from Phillip Linder, a Dallas attorney who defended Boswell on the DWI charge, which says..."Typically, because probable cause can be challenged in court, an officer will turn on the camera on the dash to establish that the guy is speeding, or that the car was all over the road. But in this case—and the video shows this—they didn't turn the camera on until they had pulled him over." This statement about officers failing to turn on the camera to record a possible DWI, while the possible DWI is driving down the road. This is normally, incorrect. Why? An officer observes a traffic violation, then turns the lights on. In most normal departments, the camera is activated when the lights are turned on. Therefore, the camera never catches the actual offense. It would be bad business for an officer to follow a DWI around the city, allowing the DWI to drive on a public street, just so he can record a bunch of bad driving. A violator is stopped for a traffic violation. Once contact is made with the driver and observations are made by the officer, it then turns into a possible DWI, or a warning or a citation, etc.... Would you truly want the officers, where ever it is that you drive, to allow a DWI to drive around so they can be recorded? You may be the other driver, crossing the next intersection...All the officer has now, is an accident he filmed. No telling how the accident may turn out.

  • Anonymous2112 12/15/2007 12:35:00 AM

    These cops should be fired, prohibited from ever holding any type of law enforment work. They should have to pay this guys attorney fees, and each should be made to pay the man $50,000 restitution. His X should be denied any child support or alimony, she should lose her rights to the kids and she should have to pay him $100K in restitution. The chief of police should be fired as well as all the supervising officiers who were on duty when this took place. What a cunt whore bitch she is. No wonder there is a drug problem in Plano, the cops are too busy doing favors for friends instead of doing their job.

  • Adam 12/13/2007 7:55:00 PM

    Hardly the first time the Plano Police have been involved in this sort of strangeness.

  • Bonnie Russell 12/13/2007 3:26:00 PM

    This is news only because he filed suit. Many times the spouse of one side or the other gets to the police. On a higher scale, Illinois, Bolingbrook Police Department knew Drew Peterson was targeting the one fianc smart enough to break up with him; (of Drew's four wives, one is dead due to strange circumstances and the last one is missing), and wouldn't allow her to press charges against him for his illegal arrests. Details at www.FamilyLawCourts.com/badcop.html Or the state of Texas, at www.FamilyLawCourts.com/statetexas.html But newspapers refuse to cover the one court used most often, and for the longest period of time. Time to demand a beat reporter for family court.

 

Most Popular Stories

Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places

    Voice Places

    Discover restaurants, nightlife, travel, shopping...

  • VOICE Daily Deals

    VOICE Daily Deals

    Get 50 to 90% off every day on restaurants, movies, massages...

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    More than 10,000 of the BEST things to eat, drink, and experience

  • My Voice Nation

    My Voice Nation

    Join the Village Voice community and get exclusive deals and info

  • Happy Hour

    Happy Hour

    Your local Happy Hour guide at your fingertips

or

Log in or Sign up

Social Connect:

Use your favorite account to access My Voice Nation.


Use your My Voice Nation account to log in:





Forgot password?
or

Sign Up or Log in

Social Connect:

Sign up for My Voice Nation with your preferred network.


Sign up for a My Voice Nation account:



Privacy policy