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