An investigation commissioned by an East Texas city found no wrongdoing in the arrest of Miss Black Texas 2016.

Miss Black Texas 2016 Carmen Ponder claimed she was harassed in May by a North Texas police chief who called her a 'black b****,' before being unlawfully detained and arrested.

Ponder, 23, sued the police force and said she wanted police accountability and formal charges to be filed against Commerce Police Chief Kerry Crews.

The Fort Worth law firm Lynn, Ross and Gannaway has now said it found no evidence that Crews made any racial statements to Ponder or to anyone else.

Miss Black Texas 2016 Cameron Ponder says she was unlawfully detained and arrested in May

She said police chief Kerry Crews called her a 'black b****' after she allegedly drove around him while he was teaching his daughter, 14, how to drive

But Ponder's attorney denounced the conclusion on social media, saying she should not have been arrested in the first place.

'Chief Crews directed the unlawful arrest of [Ponder] under unjustifiable circumstances,' Ponder's lawyer, Lee Merritt, wrote in a tweet.

'#MissBlackTexas being called a 'Black [expletive]' by some racist was bad. Being arrested by Crews for not apologizing was UNCONSTITUTIONAL!'

Now, an investigation has found that there is no evidence Crews made any racial statements towards her

In a statement, the city of Commerce said: 'While there may be additional items for consideration and possible recommended action, race-based claims will not be a factor.'

In her account, Ponder said she was driving to Walmart on May 20 when a black pickup truck cut in front of her and began driving erratically.

She said the car was braking and accelerating dangerously, and she worried it was a drunk driver.

Ponder wrote that she put her blinker on, pulled around to pass the truck and drove into the superstore parking lot.

According to Ponder, the black truck followed her into the lot and pulled up next to where she'd parked her car.

She said the passenger, who she later identified as Crews, got out of the truck and started yelling and screaming that he was teaching his 14-year-old daughter how to drive, saying Ponder shouldn't have passed his truck.

Ponder wrote that she ignored the man at first, but eventually turned to tell him 'it's illegal' about a 14-year-old driving, before walking into the store.

'That's when he screamed "oh whatever, you black b****."'

Ponder wrote about the interaction on Twitter, and explained how it started when she was driving to Wal-Mart on Saturday and black pickup truck cut in front of her and began driving erratically

She said when she walked out she saw Crews there and was quickly charged by several other officers in street clothes.

'One guy showed me his police badge and started screaming at me. He told me this guy was his chief and I better apologize to him now. I told him I was going to do that and was walking to my car,' she explained.

Next, one of the men grabbed her by the arm and pulled her roughly back into WalMart, telling her she was being detained.

When police came, she said: 'I began walking to the policeman when the aggressive guy pulled me by my arm again, told the cop that I was resisting arrest and demanded he arrest me.'

Ponder was then handcuffed and booked into jail, where she spent 24 hours. She was charged with evading arrest

Her lawyer told NBC New York that she had bruises from where she was grabbed.

Ponder was then handcuffed and booked into jail, where she spent 24 hours. She was charged with evading arrest.

Authorities told NBC that Crews was placed on administrative leave.

Ponder is calling attention to the incident to hold the officer accountable, and has started a crowdfunding page to raise money for her attorney's fees.

She wrote on a youcaring.com page that she will not take a plea deal and is 'more than willing' to take the case to trial.

'My only crime...the color of my skin,' she wrote.

Ponder's You Caring page also says she is a Dean's List student at Texas A&M University- Commerce and an intern with the Hunt County District Attorney.