The Dallas Examiner headliners for Oct. 10

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VOL. XXXIII  • OCTOBER 10, 2019

50 cents

Quest to become a Vision Zero City Free Mammograms

Beware of Medicare Scams

Health Pg 6

LifeStyle Pg 7

DIANE XAVIER

The Dallas Examiner

Eliminating traffic-related deaths by the year 2030 was the focus of the city of Dallas in its quest to become a Vision Zero City. The Dallas City Council was briefed on Vision Zero, a traffic safety strategy program, by the Director of the Department of Transportation Michael Rogers at its Oct. 2 briefing. “Vision Zero is an internationally recognized strategy to eliminate traffic fatalities and severe injuries relating to automobile users, pedestrians and bicyclists,” Rogers said. “It is based on the belief that no loss of life is acceptable and that all traffic fatalities and severe injuries are preventable. It also encourages urban design that makes streets as easy as possible to navigate for all roadway users of all

Dallas and Harris counties have the most areas in the state's latest list of the 100 most congested roadways in Texas, according to a list compiled by The Texas A&M Transportation Institute for the Texas Department of Transportation. I-35E is among the top ten most congested roadways. – Photo by Shelby Knowles/The Texas Tribune

physical abilities and promotes safe and equitable mobility for all users, such that movement around the transportation network can be done by road users of all walks of life.” On average, over 100 people died in traffic crashes everyday in the United States in 2017. There were 37,133 total traffic fatalities, of which 5,977 were pedestrians,

the National Highway Traffic Administration reported. “Now, take a little bit of time and think about that. How severe those numbers are. Those numbers are higher than the fatalities that have happened in Desert Storm. Take a real hard look and think about that,” Rogers said. Additional data by TxDOT

reported that from 2013 to 2017 there were 3,780 fatal and severe injury crashes in Dallas. Dallas is known to have one of the highest traffic fatalities in the country. It has the fifth highest traffic and pedestrian traffic fatality rates among the 25 largest U.S. cities and the highest rates among Texas’ largest six cities, including

Houston, Austin, San Antonio, El Paso and Fort Worth, according to a study conducted by the National Highway Traffic Administration in 2017. “On average, over two people died in traffic crashes every week on Dallas city streets in 2017,” Rogers said. “That is unacceptable. Of those fatalities that happened in 2017, 46 were pedestrian and one was a bicyclist. These are significant issues we truly need to start to address. When looking at some of the data and looking at those 25 major cities within the country, you will see only four cities actually are ahead of us. Those cities are Jacksonville, Phoenix, Detroit and Memphis. Our fatality rates are based on 100,000 population as well.” Dallas also ranked fifth when it

Trial judge’s finding to take inmate off death row rejected by higher court

See Vision Zero Page 3

By JOLIE McCULLOUGH The Texas Tribune

Dallas Police Chief Renee Hall is interviewed at The Texas Tribune Festival in 2017. – Photo by Qiling Wang/The Texas Tribune

Members of Botham Jean’s family rejoice in the courtroom after former Dallas police officer Amber Guyger was found guilty With her new Bible in hand, Amber Guyger leaves for jail, Oct. 3. of murder. – Photos by Tom Fox/Reuters

Guyger trial highlights why communities of color often distrust law enforcement By JUAN PABLO GARNHAM and JOLIE McCULLOUGH The Texas Tribune

The murder conviction of a White former police officer who killed an unarmed Black man in his own home – and the 10-year prison sentence a jury gave her last week – each drew different reactions in a city whose history is rife with tensions between law enforcement and communities of color. Amber Guyger’s murder conviction brought many people relief. But her sentence for killing 26-year-old Botham Jean was derided by some as being too short, even though Jean’s brother offered Guyger forgiveness and a hug at the end of the trial. And trial evidence about police officers’ conduct following the shooting – which prosecutors said showed Guyger got special treatment – spurred Dallas residents and Jean’s mother to call for reforms within the department. “The city of Dallas needs to clean up inside. The Dallas Police Department has a lot of laundry to do,” Allison Jean said in the Frank Crowley Courts Building shortly after Guyger was sentenced Oct. 2. “Every single one of

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you citizens of Dallas and residents of Dallas need to know what to do to get your city right.” Jean was eating ice cream on his couch when Guyger, who had just finished a long shift, entered his apartment. She said she confused it for her own apartment one floor below. Thinking Jean was an intruder, Guyger shot and killed him. Seemingly aware of the ever-present tension in her community that began to again boil over during Guyger’s trial, Dallas Police Department Chief U. Reneé Hall held a press conference shortly after the sentencing to address the community’s distrust of police. She mentioned allegations against police that arose at trial, like Guyger and her partner deleting their text messages around the time of the shooting and the head of the police union having cameras turned off so he could speak to Guyger off the record immediately after Jean was shot. Guyger’s defense attorneys argued there was no evidence that suggests the shooting was racially motivated. But during the sentencing phase of Guyger’s trial, prosecutors showed the jury texts in which the for-

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mer officer joked about Martin Luther King Jr.’s death and made discriminatory comments about Black police officers. “I can only imagine the community’s perception of who we are as a Dallas police department and, if we’re truly honest with one another, what law enforcement is or who law enforcement is across this country,” Hall said. But, she said, the allegations heard at trial are not “reflective of the men and women of the Dallas Police Department.” She explained that the troublesome testimony was now being handed over for investigation from the department’s internal affairs division, and that any necessary policy or procedural changes would be made afterward. Earlier on Oct. 2, a small crowd of people gathered in the foyer outside the courtroom, yelling and crying in frustration over what they said was too short of a punishment. “The energy in Dallas is more volatile now than when the case started, because you gave people a bit of hope, then you took it away,” said Changa Higgins, head of the Dallas Community Police Oversight Coalition. As is the case in cities

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across America, many Dallas residents’ distrust of authority stems largely from their public leaders’ flagrant racism in the 20th Century and the systemic biases remaining within the criminal justice system decades later. “There are a number of situations throughout this country where white men – armed – have been taken in, and Black men – unarmed – are killed,” Daryl Washington, one of the Jean family’s attorneys told reporters while the jury deliberated Wednesday. “Until we face the facts of it all, these cases are going to continue to happen. We would love to say this isn’t about race, it’s about training, but it’s a combination.” For activists in the community, this particular death had a double reading. It was another shooting of an unarmed Black man. But at the same time, Jean was a middleclass professional, resting in the privacy of his own home. “A lot of times the police shoots someone and there is some kind of criminal background,” Higgins said. “In this case there’s nothing of that. It literally could have been anybody. He was the symbol of doing everything right and still not being safe.”

See Black&Blue Page 3

214-941-3100

Paul Storey was one step away from escaping the death penalty. Then came the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. The state’s highest criminal court Oct. 2 rejected the trial court judge’s recommendation to resentence Storey to life in prison without the possibility for parole after a threeday hearing last year. Storey’s sentence was being reconsidered after it became known that Tarrant County prosecutors falsely said at his 2008 trial that the family of Storey’s victim, Jonas Cherry, wanted the death Paul Storey – Photo by penalty. Cherry’s Jenevieve Robbins/TDCJ parents have since said that they have always opposed capital punishment, including for their son’s killer. In last week’s ruling, the court explained that it was taking the unusual step of opposing the trial judge, who it acknowledged “is in the best position to assess the credibility of the witnesses.” While the court order didn’t argue against the finding that Storey’s trial lawyers were unaware of the Cherrys’ opposition, it ruled that one of his appellate attorneys – who is now dead – might have known, claiming there was no evidence to show he didn’t. The judges also ruled that since Cherry’s father said he often talked about his anti-death penalty views, the appellate attorney, Robert Ford, could have found out through “the exercise of reasonable diligence.” “The trial court found that Ford did not know that the victim’s parents opposed a death sentence for [Storey],” the court’s order states. “This finding is not supported by the record. [Storey] did not present any evidence showing what Ford did or did not know regarding the victim’s parents’ anti-death penalty views.” “And although the trial court found that Ford generally ‘had a strong reputation for his diligence,’ [Storey] presented no evidence showing that Ford was diligent in his particular case,” the ruling continued.

See Storey Page 7

Inside

State/Metro . . . . . . 2 Editorial . . . . . . . . . 4

Emergency Pet Safety

Family & Home Pg 9

Perspectives . . . . . 5

Health . . . . . . . . . . . 6

LifeStyle . . . . . . . . . 7

Family & Home. . . . 9 8

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Calendar . . . . . . . . 10

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Classifieds . . . . . . 11

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