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Tag: dallas police

  • Dallas rapper Zeethewizard dies after New Year’s shooting at nightclub

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    Dallas rapper Zeethewizard died Monday, Jan. 5, after he was shot New Year’s Day at a Dallas nightclub, police said.

    Dallas rapper Zeethewizard died Monday, Jan. 5, after he was shot New Year’s Day at a Dallas nightclub, police said.

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    A Dallas rapper named Zecqurie Fields, better known as Zeethewizard, died Monday after he was shot New Year’s Day at a Dallas nightclub, police said.

    Officers responded to a shooting call at 3:45 a.m. on Jan. 1 on Empire Central near northbound North Stemmons Freeway. Multiple people were shot, police said, and five victims were taken to a local hospital.

    Fields, 25, died Monday, police said.

    Shots were fired when an “altercation” broke out at the grand opening of a new nightclub, called Pink House Dallas, Star-Telegram news partner WFAA-TV reported. Fields was booked to perform at Pink House Dallas as part of the New Year’s and grand opening celebrations, according to WFAA.

    Dallas police have not made any arrests in the homicide case and are still investigating.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Ciara McCarthy

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Ciara McCarthy covers health and wellness as part of the Star-Telegram’s Crossroads Lab. She came to Fort Worth after three years in Victoria, Texas, where she worked at the Victoria Advocate. Ciara is focused on equipping people and communities with information they need to make decisions about their lives and well-being. Please reach out with your questions about public health or the health care system. Email cmccarthy@star-telegram.com or call or text 817-203-4391.

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  • Murder suspect fatally shot in ‘armed confrontation’ with Dallas police officers

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    A black and white Dallas police car with lights on sits under the overhang of a large building.

    A murder suspect was fatally shot by Dallas police late Saturday morning during an “armed confrontation” near a mall in Mesquite, officials say. No officers were injured.

    File photo

    A murder suspect was fatally shot by Dallas police late Saturday morning during an “armed confrontation” near a shopping center in Mesquite, officials said.

    Officers were called to the 9000 block of Markville Drive in northeast Dallas about 10:15 a.m. They found a woman who had been shot, police said. The suspect had already left the area; the victim died a short time later at a hospital.

    About 11:45 a.m., Dallas officers spotted the suspect on an Interstate 635 service road near Town East Mall in Mesquite and conducted a felony traffic stop. The suspect got out of the car and shots were fired, according to police. Officials haven’t said what led the officers to fire their guns.

    The suspect died at the scene. No officers were injured, police said.

    The Dallas and Mesquite police departments will both investigate the shooting, officials said. The Dallas County District Attorney’s Office will also conduct an investigation.

    An attorney from the Texas law enforcement union CLEAT responded to the assist the officers who were involved, the organization said on X.

    Officials haven’t publicly identified the officers or the suspect.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Harriet Ramos

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Harriet Ramos covers crime and other breaking news for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

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  • UPDATE: Dallas Police Chief Eddie Garcia Says Slain Officer Was ‘Executed,’ Provides Details of Shooting

    UPDATE: Dallas Police Chief Eddie Garcia Says Slain Officer Was ‘Executed,’ Provides Details of Shooting

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    Editor’s Note 8/30/2024, 5:50 p.m.: This article has been updated to include new information. Dallas police officer Darron Burks was shot to death Thursday night in what Dallas police chief Eddie Garcia described as an execution…

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    Kelly Dearmore

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  • North Texas Police Engage in a Surprising Number of High-Speed Chases

    North Texas Police Engage in a Surprising Number of High-Speed Chases

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    The Woodall Rodgers Freeway overpass near downtown Dallas was shut down for much of Thursday morning after a car carrying four passengers went over the side of the ramp and crashed below, killing all four at the scene.

    Friday morning, the Dallas County Medical Examiner named the four individuals involved as Sabria Lacey, DeAvion Aubert, Robert Gowans Jr. and Anthony Lisbon. Ranging in age from 21 to 22 years, the group was evading Irving police in a stolen vehicle.

    Irving police released dashcam footage showing the stolen vehicle speeding up the ramp and then bursting into flames after it fell. NBC 5 reported that “officers with the Dallas Police, Dallas County Sheriff’s Office and Dallas Fire-Rescue all arrived and tried to provide first aid to the occupants of the stolen vehicle.”

    On Thursday, CBS 11 reported that Irving police have been involved in more than 500 chases since 2018, and that many of them evolved into high-speed affairs.

    “Records also show more than one in every four Irving police chases reached or exceeded 100 mph. Police have not said what speed Thursday’s chase reached,” the report stated. “Out of the 515 Irving police chases since 2018, only one time was an officer disciplined for failing to follow the department’s pursuit policy. The officer was suspended by the department, according to police records.”

    Earlier this week, The Dallas Morning News reported on the aftermath of a police chase gone wrong when a father and his 3-year-old son were seriously injured during a Garland police pursuit in which they were not the suspects. The report says the injuries resulted from “a terrifying accident caused by what appears to be a violation of Garland’s police pursuit policy.”

    Also in Garland, another police chase ended when 32-year-old officer Joe Tsai was killed in pursuit of a vehicle with a fake paper license tag in November.

    “Our agency has one of the stricter pursuit policies here in the region.” – Arlington police spokesperson

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    We reached out to several of the largest police departments in North Texas, including Dallas, Arlington, Plano, Frisco, Fort Worth, Denton and Carrollton, for more about their pursuit policies and to determine how many chases their officers have been involved in over the past few years. Some departments asked us to file an open records request for both pieces of info (which we did), while others asked us to file that request for just the stats. Some other departments, however, filled us in on both their pursuit policy and the number of chases their offices have been involved in recently.

    From 2022 until now, Dallas Police Department officers have pursued more than 180 chases: 90 in 2022, 89 in 2023 and three so far this year.

    According to the DPD’s General Orders an officer may engage in a chase only under certain conditions, including “when the officer has probable cause to believe that a felony involving the use or threat of physical force or violence has been, or is about to be, committed,” among a number of other circumstances. Should a Dallas officer see “a suspect discharge a firearm in a public place or display a firearm in a public place in a threatening manner,” a chase can be engaged.

    From 2018 to 2022, Arlington police officers engaged in 342 chases (numbers for 2023 haven’t been posted yet). According to the annual pursuit analysis report the department publishes, the vast majority of Arlington police chases are due to suspected felonies or suspected DWIs. In 2022 alone, there were 63 police chases in Arlington, with 15 ending in the suspect voluntarily stopping and 13 ending in a collision. The remaining chases in 2022 ended because of officer or supervisor decisions.

    A spokesperson for the Arlington Police Department said it does not release its general orders, but that the department requires serious discretion in this area.

    “Our agency has one of the stricter pursuit policies here in the region,” the spokesperson explained via email. “It lays out very specific conditions that must be met for an APD officer to initiate a pursuit. It also gives officers and their supervisors flexibility to terminate pursuits if they feel it is no longer safe or prudent for the pursuit to continue.”

    Fort Worth would provide neither the police policy for pursuits nor any statistics regarding chases, but KERA reported this week that Cowtown cops have been kept rather busy with chases on its roads in recent years.

    “Over the past six years, nearly 1 of out every 3 Fort Worth Police Department car chases have caused a crash,” the KERA report stated. “Fort Worth officers initiated 1,331 pursuits from 2017 to 2022, for an average of four chases a week, according to data from the department’s use of force reports analyzed by the Fort Worth Report. Of those, 432 resulted in an accident.”

    Police chases are a hot topic across all of Texas, and especially near the border where Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s controversial and costly border security plan, Operation Lone Star, looms large. In November 2023, Human Rights Watch published a 77-page report noting that the “program led to crashes that killed at least 74 people and injured at least another 189 in a 29-month period.”



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    Kelly Dearmore

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