They might as well be, now.
Austin-American Statesman: Many license plate frames illegal
Texans who unintentionally cover even a small portion of their car's license plate can be stopped by police, ticketed and perhaps arrested for the offense, the state's highest criminal court ruled Wednesday.The 8-1 decision left three Court of Criminal Appeals judges holding their noses - proclaiming the statute "uncommonly bad," but acknowledging that the letter of the law prohibits drivers from encasing their license plate in a frame that obscures the state name, state nickname or even portions of the artwork.
Here's the relevant text:
§ 502.409. WRONG, FICTITIOUS, ALTERED, OR OBSCURED LICENSE PLATE
- (a) A person commits an offense if the person
attaches to or displays on a motor vehicle a number plate or
registration insignia that:
- (7) has a coating, covering, or protective material that:
- (A) distorts angular visibility or
detectability; or
- (B) alters or obscures the letters or numbers on the plate, the color of the plate, or another original design feature of the plate.
The language is clear. You are breaking the law if you have a license plate that has material that obscures any original design feature of the plate.


Back to the Statesman:
Unfortunately, the law as written unintentionally endangers civil liberties, Judge Cathy Cochran wrote in an opinion that, while siding with the majority, raises concerns about the ruling's impact."It is a 'gotcha' law because it allows the police to arbitrarily stop, ticket, arrest and search any person who is driving a car whose license plate frame covers up any portion of that plate's design," Cochran wrote in an opinion joined by Judges Tom Price and Cheryl Johnson. "Look around you - the vast majority of drivers on Texas roads and highways can be stopped and arrested at any given moment."
Still, Cochran wrote, under a law revised in 2003, "it is a crime . . . if that frame obscures even the tiniest bit of the doo-dad design details of the standard-issue Texas license plate."Violating the standard a Class C misdemeanor with a maximum fine of $200. But, Cochran noted, the offense can also result in arrest, a trip to jail and a search by police.
The case began with a November 2003 traffic stop by a Fredericksburg police officer. Craig Hill Johnson was pulled over because his dealer-installed license plate frame partially obscured the word "Texas," hid the words "Lone Star State" and obscured a depiction of a space shuttle in a nighttime sky.
The ruling alarmed Jim Harrington, director of the Texas Civil Rights Project in Austin."It's terrible. Basically, the Court of Criminal Appeals is giving enormous power to the police to stop people on their will and whim," Harrington said. "Nobody is ever going to drive a car that is perfectly, perfectly in compliance with all the laws and regulations imposed by Legislature."
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