Nov 20, 2024
Throughout our Driven to Death series of reports on speeding drivers, viewers have wondered what’s happened to speed enforcement on busy Dallas freeways. NBC 5 Investigates has discovered data confirming there’s been a dramatic drop in the number of tickets issued by deputies tasked with patrolling some of Dallas County’s busiest highways. On a recent weeknight, NBC 5 Investigates used a LiDAR gun and a retired law enforcement officer, to clock drivers on Stemmons Freeway. In our speed check, drivers often hit 90 mph, while some even topped the triple digits. One motorcycle rider near Interstate 35E and Marsalis was clocked at 142. With speeds that high in a county with a population of more than 2.6 million people, it’s easy to think that Dallas County Sheriff’s Department deputies could write more tickets than ever. However, Dallas County ticket data uncovered by NBC 5 Investigates showed the opposite — a 65% decline in the number of tickets written over the last five years. In 2019, the records showed the Dallas County Sheriff’s Department issued over 5,600 speeding tickets and 200 warnings. In 2023, the deputies issued only about 1,900 tickets, and warnings were down to 150. NBC 5 Investigates asked Dallas County Sheriff Marian Brown what she’d tell drivers who wonder about the level of enforcement after seeing other drivers flouting the speed limit. “I would say to them, it’s out there,” Brown said. “It’s not to the degree that they would want.” Brown told NBC 5 Investigates that the number of tickets issued declined because deputies made fewer stops during the COVID-19 pandemic. Since then, the numbers have not come back up, and Brown said that’s because deputies assigned to patrol the county’s freeways also have to respond to calls in parts of the county where they provide police services. That duty, the sheriff said, leaves less time for deputies to enforce speeds on the highways. Dallas County Sheriff Marian Brown, left, talks with NBC 5 senior investigative reporter Scott Friedman, right. “We’re out there, but we’re having to measure out what we have in terms of resources and do what we can do with what we have,” Brown said. Still, NBC 5 Investigates found evidence that the sheriff’s department missed opportunities to tap into funding that could have helped increase speed enforcement. Some deputies now worry that a lack of consistent enforcement has created a vicious cycle. They now spend so much time responding to freeway crashes that they find it difficult to devote time to patrolling for dangerous speeders. Chris Dyer with the Dallas County Sheriffs Association. “The more that we’re tied up on crashes, the less time that we have to do actual enforcement on the highways, which means the more crashes that we have, which means the less time we have to do enforcement, said Chris Dyer, president of the Dallas County Sheriff’s Association, a labor and advocate group representing deputies and sheriff’s department employees. Dyer, who is also a senior sergeant with the Dallas County Sheriff’s Department’s patrol division and traffic section, agreed that increased enforcement results in fewer crashes. “Absolutely. The times that we come together and we run specials and enforcement specials, we won’t have crashes in those areas for the day,” Dyer said. “So it’s definitely a cause and effect.” Dyer said it has become difficult to run stepped-up speed enforcement because of staffing challenges and overtime limits. “We’re reducing overtime. We’re reducing comp time,” Dyer said. “I’ve had to take one of my deputies and send him home for two weeks because his comp time level is too high and I can’t hire anybody to replace him, which means I’ve got basically one less person on the street every single day.” Some departments apply for state and federal grant money that allows them to pay overtime and assign more officers to speed enforcement. Data from Dallas County showed that the sheriff’s department has written only four speeding tickets using grant funding in the last five years. Brown told NBC 5 Investigates the department has often passed on grant funds because it needs to keep deputies available to deal with calls in the neighborhoods it covers, away from the freeways. “If we have not been writing the citations and then we asked for a grant and we are given that grant, we have to stop doing what we’re doing over here and focus and tell our people this is what you have to do,” Brown said. “In doing that … we are negating some other police service.” The sheriff’s association said it was a missed opportunity. They believe grant funding or additional funding from the county budget would help them increase enforcement, reduce dangerous speeds and save more lives on the road. That would include areas along Stemmons from Wycliff to Empire Central, where there have been five fatal speed-related crashes since January 2023, and along Interstate 30 from Hampton Road to Chalk Hill, where there have been four fatal speed-related crashes since the start of 2023. “We would be able to put more people out on the highways. We would be able to be proactive,” Dyer said. “We could bring these crash numbers down.” Michael Morris, North Central Texas Council of Governments. More grant money for speed enforcement is about to flow into the area. Michael Morris, transportation director for the North Central Texas Council of Governments, has pledged to pour money into overtime programs to help law enforcement use unmarked vehicles to crack down on excessive speeds that have worsened since the pandemic. “I’m going to bring as much as I possibly can, as unmarked as I possibly can, to have the residents of the region know we’re serious about bad behavior when it comes to driving,” Morris said in an interview with NBC 5 Investigates earlier this year. The question remains whether the Dallas County Sheriff’s Department will participate and increase efforts to stop drivers who openly disregard the speed limit. “I can’t speak to the future, but, you know, I would hope that in our evaluation every year of what it is that we do, that we’re able to reach a point where we can,” Brown said. Dallas County Sheriff Marian Brown. If the Dallas County Sheriff’s Office doesn’t step up speed enforcement, it raises the question of who will? Brown told NBC 5 Investigates her department has also often passed on grants to allow other departments within the county to use the funding to increase patrols on highways running through their cities. But, under an agreement with the city of Dallas, the sheriff’s department has primary responsibility for freeway response on sections of Interstate 45, Interstate 20, I-35E and I-30. And, in the city of Dallas, the police department has only a small traffic unit and limited resources for freeway speed patrols as the department focuses primarily on addressing neighborhood crime. Highlighted highways show where the Dallas County Sheriff’s Department has primary responsibility for freeway response along sections of Interstate 45, Interstate 20, Interstate 35E and Interstate 30. DRIVEN TO DEATH driven to death Nov 2, 2023 Dallas traffic death rate worst among 10 largest U.S. cities driven to death Nov 6, 2023 Dallas plan to cut traffic deaths rolls slowly years after council OK'd ‘Vision Zero' driven to death Nov 7, 2023 Dallas City Council members question lack of progress on ‘Vision Zero' traffic safety plan driven to death Nov 8, 2023 Can a Canadian city be a model for Dallas when it comes to road safety? driven to death Nov 9, 2023 Experts question if high speed limits and bad road designs add to Dallas traffic deaths driven to death Nov 17, 2023 With speed the leading cause of Dallas traffic deaths, where are the police? Dallas Jan 30 $500M Dallas transportation bond proposal devotes less than 2% to ‘Vision Zero' road safety plan Dallas Dec 13, 2023 One dangerous Dallas street will get a ‘road diet' with federal funds Dallas Jan 31 Dallas council members question ‘minimal' Vision Zero road safety funding in bond plan Fort Worth Feb 6 Fort Worth fatal crashes up 31% in five years as city talks ‘Vision Zero' driven to death Feb 6 Dallas intersection where NBC 5 highlighted pedestrian dangers gets a new crosswalk driven to death Feb 7 Draft traffic study suggests major changes to slow speedy drivers on Ferguson Road in far East Dallas driven to death Feb 14 Five pedestrians killed in 11 months on less than a mile of Loop 12, prompting calls for change driven to death Feb 16 State senator pledges action after NBC 5 investigation highlights deaths on Loop 12 driven to death Feb 20 Dallas ‘Vision Zero' road safety progress questioned at city council briefing driven to death Feb 21 ‘It could have killed someone' Dallas residents beg for protection from dangerous drivers on NW Hwy driven to death Feb 28 Dallas Dept. of Transportation misses deadlines for responding to road complaints thousands of times driven to death Feb 29 Dallas residents hear city's plan to address traffic dangers on Ferguson Road driven to death Mar 27 DART considers moving bus stops to areas safer for pedestrians driven to death Apr 3 Dallas City Council questions how to accelerate road safety plan traffic May 1 Could your phone help save you from a wrong-way driver? Fort Worth May 15 Fort Worth streets identified as dangerous years ago are still among the most deadly Dallas May 22 Triple-digit speeds on Central raise concerns about expressway turned speedway driven to death Aug 28 Dallas considers lowering speed limits on city's deadliest road Dallas Sep 6 Passenger in car that hit & killed student on E. Ledbetter Drive/Loop 12 charged with murder: DPD driven to death Sep 8 Dozens of 'emergency' traffic safety changes planned for Loop 12 driven to death Sep 11 Dallas lowers speed limit on Central Expwy after NBC 5 Investigates reveals extreme speeds driven to death Sep 25 Headed ‘to the pokey.' DFW-area police warn extreme speeders of possible arrest Dallas Sep 30 Crash injuring six children highlights Loop 12 danger zone again Dallas Oct 3 Speed limits drop on Loop 12, Central Expressway headed into Downtown Dallas driven to death Oct 15 New safety measures planned for deadliest street in Dallas
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