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Veteran urges Dayton commission to pause photo-enforcement program, alleges legal violations

4990824 · June 18, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

At a Dayton City Commission meeting, resident Aaron Timmons urged a moratorium on the city's photo-enforcement program, alleging missing warning signs, unlawful threats to immobilize vehicles and withholding of records; city staff said they will follow up with a memo after consulting the law department.

Aaron Timmons, a disabled U.S. Air Force veteran, asked the Dayton City Commission on June 18 to place an immediate moratorium on the city's photo-enforcement program, arguing the program violates state law and city code and that the city has not produced requested records.

Timmons addressed the commission during the public-comment period, saying “the trailer sat in the same exact public spot for months, functioning like any other fixed camera,” and that Ohio law — as he cited it, Ohio Revised Code 4511.094 — requires a clearly posted warning sign within 300…

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