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Durango police chief reviews enforcement philosophy, five years of ticketing

Over 15,000 citations and double the warnings issued since 2020
Durango Police Department has issued 15,508 citations and 31,393 verbal and written warnings since the start of 2020. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald file)

Durango Police Department has issued over 15,000 citations and more than double that many warnings since 2020, Police Chief Brice Current said last week.

He was discussing the city’s enforcement policies as guided by the police department’s ethos and approach to law enforcement, a response to a request from newcomer Councilors Shirley Gonzales and Kip Koso for more information about policing in Durango.

The councilors were interested in learning more about DPD’s enforcement strategy, given recent calls to increase enforcement of speeding and off-leash dogs on the Animas River Trail.

Current covered broad subjects such as values-based policing, discretion and training, small enforcement in a free society and responding – or not – to public pressure.

DPD has issued 15,508 citations and 31,393 verbal and written warnings since the start of 2020. Current noted the abundance of warnings and said DPD conducts law enforcement to protect, not to punish.

“Sometimes, the best enforcement is a respectful conversation,” he said.

Warnings and citations

Durango Police Chief Brice Current said the police department has issued 15,508 citations from the beginning of 2020 through 2025 as of Wednesday.

Police issued 1,683 citations in 2020, the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in which there was reduced contact between officers and the public. The number of citations issued rose in following years:

There were 2,301 citations in 2021.

DPD issued 3,218 citations in 2022.

Officers issued 3,556 citations in 2023.

DPD issued 3,238 tickets in 2024.

As of Wednesday, officers had issued 1,512 tickets this year.

Of those tickets, 9,594 were referred to Durango’s municipal court and 5,914 were referred to La Plata County Court.

The police department issued more than double the number of warnings through the same time period, totaling 31,393 since 2020.

DPD issued 3,900 verbal warnings and 729 written warnings in 2020, totaling 4,629 warnings.

In 2021, police issued 4,867 verbal warnings and 280 written warnings for a total of 5,147 warnings.

DPD issued 5,795 verbal warnings and 280 written warnings in 2022. In all, it issued a total of 6,075 warnings.

There were 5,259 verbal warnings issued in 2023 in addition to 207 written warnings for a total of 5,466 warnings.

Last year, DPD issued 5,969 verbal warnings and 700 written warnings, adding up to 6,669 warnings in all.

There have been 3,225 verbal warnings and 182 written warnings issued by DPD this year as of Wednesday, totaling 3,407 warnings for 2025.

Officers are trained that every ticket or citation issued should reflect a public safety risk. Tickets should be issued fairly, and officers must be able to articulate a goal to deter future behavior in the spirit of building, not eroding, trust.

“I learned a long time ago pulling over vehicles that if you feel like you’re writing a ticket and you feel stupid inside, it probably is,” he said. “For instance, pulling a vehicle over for a license plate light – it might be good to give a warning in that situation.”

He cited letting someone speeding in an uncongested area go with a warning, as long as the person doesn’t have a history of crashes, as another example of when a citation may not be necessary.

DPD also values public safety over quotas, he said, adding ticket quotas aren’t ethical and may be illegal. Tickets place a burden on families, not just individuals, where warnings can sometimes be just as effective at deterring behavior.

Cpl. Nick Stasi of the Durango Police Department said the instrumentation in his police cruiser includes a radar on the dashboard; a monitor that displays current dispatcher calls (upper right); a controller for the radio, light bar and siren (middle right); and a controller for the forward camera and backseat camera (lower right).

That changes when people are knowingly and blatantly breaking the law, he said.

“We’re seeing a lot of teenagers with their throttle e-bikes ripping through town, obviously a ticket may be the best answer, and maybe even seizing their bike and having a conversation with their parents,” he said.

The top 10 ticketed offenses in the past 4½ years include speeding at No. 1 with 2,250 citations; theft of services at No. 2 with 677 citations; and driving under the influence and like crimes of drugs or alcohol at No. 3 with 630 citations.

The full top 10 ticketed offenses are:

  • Speeding 10-19 mph above the legal speed limit, 2,250 citations.
  • Theft of services, 677 tickets.
  • Driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol, 630 tickets.
  • Failure to appear to a court summons, 523 citations.
  • Traffic signal violations, 522 tickets.
  • Violation of a protection order, 510 tickets.
  • Violation of open container laws, 502 citations.
  • Trespassing, 996 tickets.
  • Expired license plates, 482 tickets.
  • Disorderly conduct, 456 tickets.

When it comes to dogs at large, a cause of concern to residents as of late, Current said the city contracts with La Plata County Animal Control to enforce animals at large statutes, although it has increased direct officer enforcement of off-leash dogs and reckless cyclists on the Animas River Trail and across the city.

DPD’s open space rangers take weekly patrols and issue warnings and citations, and the city has reassigned a police service technician to the new role of full-time open space ranger. The officer will complete training in a couple of weeks, he said.

Because of increased enforcement, DPD has observed increased compliance from trail users when it comes to leashing their dogs and riding safely. But, DPD is also grappling with type 3 ebike users speeding recklessly on the trail and elsewhere.

Current

“We have a lot of these individuals running from us,” he said, adding it’s not a great idea to chase a 13-year-old through busy trails and streets.

Instead, DPD is relying on its camera trailer to identify culprits who can be ticketed at their homes, he said.

DPD increased enforcement on the Animas River Trail after calls from residents to do so. But, Current said, although the police department elevated that priority, individual officers are trained not to bend under public pressure.

When officers are criticized, their job is to find the balance, he said. Every police contact with the public is different, and officers are charged with weighing several factors when deciding if a warning or citation is necessary: the city’s strategic plan, mission and vision; officer oaths of office; prior warning history and aggravating factors; and a slew of other variables.

He said an officer recently issued a woman a citation for walking alongside her off-leash dog, which itself was old and walking slowly. He didn’t comment on whether the citation was warranted, but used that as an example of how officers should not allow public opinion to influence their discretion.

Current said no system can catch every infraction.

“In a free society, enforcement must be thoughtful, prioritized, recognizing the limited resources and the shared responsibility of the community,” he said.

cburney@durangoherald.com



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