Tag: Dallas Police Department

Dallas 911 Not Responding

Dallas 911 Not Responding

The City of Dallas has multiple questions to answer about the Dallas 911 not responding after a deaf woman, Zarea Dixon, was found dead in her home when police officers took over an hour to respond to her call for help.

In a separate incident it took more than six minutes to respond to an apartment fire in North Dallas.

Dixon called 911 to report her boyfriend had broken into her apartment along South Polk Street and attacked her with a knife.

An interpreter with Sorensen Translation Services relayed that Dixon had been attacked stating her “ex-boyfriend broke into her house, beat her up and tried to stab her with a knife.”

Dallas 911 Not Responding

Dixon provided the suspect’s name, description and date of birth to the police through the translator. She also said he had left her home.

Dixon “declined an ambulance but stated she ‘needed the police,'” according to the affidavit.

In addition to the non response to this woman, Dallas Police has not responded to multiple other incidents.

Additionally, Dallas police never took a report on three students burned by fireworks launched at them in North Dallas.

Dallas 911 Not Responding To Fires Either

At another event, sixty to seventy firefighters responded and saw flames coming from the second floor of the three-story apartment building upon arrival last week.

The fire quickly spread to the third floor and then into the attic space and roof of the building requiring the additional alarms by Dallas Fire Rescue.

Dallas Fire Station 29 is approximately one mile away or roughly three minutes.

Dallas 911 Not Responding

In comments to the media, Dallas Fire Fighters Association President Jim McDade said, “When the first companies got there — there was an enormous amount of fire, probably due to a delay in response,” McDade said.

There were no deaths or injuries, but more than twenty apartments were destroyed and more than one hundred residents displaced.

Slow responses can endanger firefighters. In New York, a firefighter with Brooklyn’s Ladder 170 lost his life last weekend.

Dallas Police Honored For Crime Reduction Day After Mass Shooting

Dallas Police Honored For Crime Reduction Day After Mass Shooting

The Dallas Police Department has terrible timing per local crime watchers. A supporter of the September 11 Foundation reached out with this story. Per Dallas local news, Dallas Police honored for crime reduction day after mass shooting involving ten victims and no suspect in downtown Dallas.

The move comes less than a week after a Dallas judge lowered the bond for a murder suspect represented by a campaign contributor from $2,000,000 to just $500,000 and police are still searching for a teenage gunman who shot four over Christmas.

Dallas Police Honored For Crime Reduction Day After Mass Shooting
Chief Eddie Garcia Seen With Mayor Eric Johnson

Surprise To Citizens: Dallas Police Honored For Crime Reduction Day After Mass Shooting

The news came as a surprise to citizens too as Garcia’s plans have been mostly kept under wraps from citizens and journalists. The award also comes after Dallas was hit by a data breach which affected nearly twenty thousand cases including assaults, rape, and other crimes against persons. Police Chief Eddie Garcia had a number of comments in the city press release. Police Chief Eddie Garcia had a number of comments in the city press release.

Police Chief Eddie Garcia had a number of comments in the city press release.

Dallas Police Chief Eddie Garcia said, “The Violent Crime Evidence-Based Reduction Plan is the result of work closely with criminologists, hearing from other departments within the City, and, most importantly, listening to our neighborhoods most impacted by violent crime. Our ultimate goal is the reduction of crime, with an increase in community trust. We will strive for both, as these concepts are not mutually exclusive. We will see further challenges in 2022 and our priority now is for our men and women to continue to partner with our community and strive to achieve an even safer Dallas.”

The award also comes just weeks after Dallas Police chose not to charge a Dallas paramedic who was seen on video kicking a subject repeatedly.