Police
Street Racing in Dallas Nearly Doubled During the Pandemic
By Peter Simek | 13 hours ago
We’ve seen the videos: Cars slows to a halt on a busy highway. Engines rev, tires slip, rubber burns, and a vehicle lurches to life, spinning in circles across the empty lanes of what was, seconds earlier, a continuous rush of traffic. A parade of souped-up cars take turns careening across the road. Spectators get out of their cars and onto the highway, phones held high, ready to capture the latest Dallas rendition of the Tokyo Drift, with some creeping perilously close to the spinning vehicles and reaching out to tap the bumpers of the massive machines that fling across the road.
Street racing and performing incidents have proliferated in 2020, an escalation of a trend that has spread across many American cities in recent years. According to the Dallas Police Department, incidents of street racing — which includes drag racing, as well as highway shutdowns, donut performances, takeovers, drifting, burnouts and the like — have nearly doubled in 2020, from 4,867 in 2019 to 8,441 this year. In May, the Dallas City Council passed a new street racing ordinance to give police officers more leverage in cracking down on these incidents. Next week, the department will brief the council on how those ongoing efforts are going.
The stepped-up enforcement efforts have led to an increase in citations, arrests, and auto impoundments. Dallas police officers have already issued an incredible 14,000 citations this year for speeding and racing activities, including 612 citations given to spectators at speeding and racing incidents. They have made 1,196 arrests, which have resulted in 184 felony charges, 48 seized guns, 72 incidents of narcotics seizure, and the towing of 659 vehicles. Police have also recovered 34 stolen vehicles while disrupting speeding and racing activities.
And yet, the events continue.
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