Terence “Bud” Crawford Found Guilty of Careless Driving After High-Profile Omaha Traffic Stop

Terence “Bud” Crawford has fought some of the toughest opponents in professional boxing, but on Monday, a Douglas County courtroom handed him his latest L. The Omaha native and pound-for-pound boxing legend was found guilty of careless driving in a bench trial, capping off a legal saga that began on what should have been one of the happiest days of his career.
The verdict came quickly and quietly compared to the drama that sparked the case in the first place. Crawford, who did not take the stand during the trial, was ordered to pay $124 total: a $75 base fine plus $49 in court costs. For a man who has earned millions inside the ring, the dollar amount is almost beside the point. It is the circumstances surrounding the charge, and what they say about the night of September 2025, that have kept this story in the public conversation for months.
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Crawford had just been celebrated with a parade through downtown Omaha, honoring a milestone no male boxer had ever reached before. He became the first in the sport’s history to capture three unified division titles across three weight classes, a feat that put him in conversations about the greatest boxers of all time. That parade rolled through the same streets where, just hours later, he would find himself ordered out of a car at gunpoint.
Now, with the criminal case officially closed, attention turns to what is still unresolved. A federal lawsuit connected to the same traffic stop remains pending, meaning this story is far from its final round.
How a Celebration Turned Into a Confrontation
Image Credit: wowt6 / YouTube.
The traffic stop happened in September 2025 in the area of 12th and Capitol Avenue in downtown Omaha, just hours after the city had thrown Crawford a parade. Officers pulled the vehicle over and, according to authorities, said they did not hear Crawford disclose that there were legal firearms inside the car. That prompted officers to order Crawford and three other occupants out of the vehicle at gunpoint.
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The images and accounts of that moment spread quickly, generating significant attention given who was in the car and what he had just been honored for earlier that same day.
What Omaha Police Said About the Stop
Omaha Police Chief Todd Schmaderer addressed the incident publicly in December 2025, making a point that Crawford was not targeted and that the officers followed OPD policy. At the same time, Schmaderer acknowledged there were accountability issues that needed to be examined, which was a notable admission even while defending the department’s overall conduct.
That kind of nuanced response from a police chief, neither a full defense nor a full rebuke, reflects how sensitive the situation became. Crawford is not just a local athlete. He is a figure of genuine civic pride in Omaha, and the optics of the city’s hero being pulled out of a car at gunpoint on his own parade day were impossible to ignore.
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What We Can Learn From This Incident
Cases like this one carry lessons that go beyond any single verdict. First, the importance of communication during a traffic stop cannot be overstated. Whether a passenger or driver, immediately and clearly disclosing the presence of legal firearms to officers can prevent a routine stop from escalating. Crawford’s situation illustrates how quickly a moment can shift, even for someone well-known in the community.
Second, police accountability and transparency matter even when individual officers follow written policy. Chief Schmaderer’s own words acknowledged that following protocol and doing things in the best possible way are not always the same thing. That gap is exactly where trust between communities and law enforcement tends to break down, and it deserves honest conversation regardless of the outcome of any single trial.
Third, high-profile cases have consequences that outlast the courtroom. Crawford still faces a pending federal lawsuit related to the same stop, which means his legal situation is not resolved by Monday’s verdict. Guilt on a $124 traffic charge and broader civil rights questions are entirely separate matters.
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The Federal Lawsuit Is Still Alive
While Monday’s bench trial is finished, the federal lawsuit connected to the September traffic stop remains active. That case will likely draw far more scrutiny than a careless driving charge ever could, touching on questions of civil rights, police conduct, and what accountability actually looks like when the cameras are rolling.
Crawford’s team has not been shy about pushing back on the narrative that the stop was routine and unremarkable. Given the timing, the setting, and the national attention Crawford commands as a boxing superstar, this case will continue generating headlines well past any traffic court verdict.
For now, Crawford owes the state of Nebraska $124. What he is owed, or not owed, in federal court is a much larger question still waiting for an answer.




