St. Paul Police Department cites most distracted drivers — by a long shot — in state campaign
When you are driving, it only takes one second of taking your eyes off the road and glancing at your phone for a tragedy to happen, law enforcement officials said on the heels of a distracted driving campaign in Minnesota.
'Everybody thinks it will just take a second to look at their phone and it's no big deal and they've done it a hundred times and nothing bad has happened — but we have seen crashes that happen in an instant and not only alters the drivers life but the lives of everyone around them,' said St. Paul Police Cmdr. Jeremy Ellison.
After law enforcement agencies across the state joined together in April to target distracted drivers, more than 6,000 citations were given, according to the state Department of Public Safety's Office of Traffic Safety.
The St. Paul Police Department gave out 1,326 of those, far more than the agency with the next highest number, the Minnesota State Patrol's west metro district, which gave out 329.
'We are not out to write tickets, we're out to save lives. But if drivers won't take safety seriously, enforcement becomes necessary.' said Mike Hanson, director of the Office of Traffic Safety. 'Every time you take your eyes off the road, you're gambling with your life and the lives of others around you. No text, no call is worth a tragedy.'
In St. Paul, the police department worked to let the public know they were targeting distracted driving by posting videos on their Facebook page to alert the community about their efforts and by discussing the campaign at regularly scheduled community meetings, Ellison said.
During the campaign, St. Paul police placed spotters on the sides of roads looking for drivers using cell phones. When they spotted a distracted driver, they notified officers in squad cars, who pulled the drivers over.
The department also used a special vehicle from the state, a pickup that has cameras on the sides to capture video evidence of drivers using their cell phones, Ellison said.
During the campaign, one driver was stopped twice in 10 minutes for a hands-free cell phone violation.
The 32-year-old man was stopped on April 22 at Seventh Street and Bates Avenue and then seven minutes later cited again at Seventh Street and Payne Avenue, about a mile down the road, Ellison said.
In another instance, while traffic was stopped from congestion, the driver in a vehicle next to a St. Paul law enforcement officer was using her phone. The officer turned on his squad car lights and approached the driver who was still intently looking at her phone. She was startled to see the officer near her and was cited for the hands-free cell phone law.
In March, a 17-year-old was driving down Shepard Road in St. Paul when her phone dinged and she looked down. 'In that instant, a pedestrian stepped into the roadway,' Ellison said. 'Thankfully it was not a fatality but it had a big impact on her and the pedestrian. She felt terrible that it happened. That's an example of everything seems to be fine and in an instant you look down and things change and tragedy strikes.'
In 2024, at least 29 fatalities and 137 serious injuries were attributed to distracted driving, state officials said. One in 11 crashes last year were due to distracted driving.
'It's 100 percent preventable,' Ellison said. 'Those text messages and changing the music or using GPS driving in hand, those are all things that can wait or should be done ahead of time before driving. We really need people to put their phones down.'
'Hands-free' means you can't hold you phone in your hand while driving.
The law allows a driver to use a cell phone to make calls, text, listen to music or podcasts and get directions, but only by voice commands or single-touch activation without holding the phone.
Accessing social media, streaming videos or Googling information on a device while driving are against the law in Minnesota, even in hands-free mode.
Visit HandsFreeMN.org for more information about the law.
States are telling sheriffs whether they can — or can't — work with ICE
Ely team helps fight northern Minnesota wildfires from the sky
Letters: Preventing landlords from screening tenants is a one-sided view of our housing problem
St. Anthony: 3-year-old hospitalized with reported accidental gunshot wound to head
Trooper accused of producing child porn faces new charges in federal indictment
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
ICE presence reported in Coachella Valley but immigration agency mum so far. What we know
This story has been updated into include new information. Reports of a large presence of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers at locations in Cathedral City and Palm Springs circulated online Friday along with videos and images that appear to show the agency's officers and their vehicles. ICE had not responded to a request from The Desert Sun for information about the nature of the observed activity as of late Friday afternoon. Luz Gallegos, executive director of TODEC, an organization that advocates for the rights of immigrants, said volunteers had observed activity in the area. They said the operation appeared to have been targeted toward someone in particular and not a mass immigration sweep. But the organization is still waiting on additional information to confirm, she added. Rep. Raul Ruiz, a Democrat who represents parts of the Coachella Valley, said in a statement Friday afternoon that he has "formally requested more information from ICE regarding the raid by masked agents in unmarked vehicles in Cathedral City.' Ruiz added that he was 'actively monitoring the situation and following reports.' Local anxiety and concern was stoked as immigration sweeps were reported across Los Angeles Friday. President Donald Trump has proclaimed that his administration would focus on deporting those in the country illegally. Gallegos said TODEC's 24/7 hotline started receiving calls about the situation at 7:45 a.m. TODEC's trained volunteers went out once they received a location and documented that there was an ICE operation behind Cardenas Markets on Date Palm Drive in Cathedral City, she said. That shopping center was one of several locations where people reported seeing ICE agents. The other locations included two other shopping centers and strip malls along Ramon Road, including the centers located around the Ramon Road's intersection with Gene Autry Trail in Palm Springs and its intersection with Landau Boulevard in Cathedral City. There were also reports on Facebook of ICE agents at a shopping area at Date Palm Drive and Highway 111. California's U.S. Sens. Adam Schiff and Alex Padilla and two U.S. congressmembers from the state released a statement on Friday calling for an internal ICE investigation into a recent raid in San Diego that reportedly saw 20 ICE agents detain four employees of two restaurants in the city. The senators said the agents wore "military-style gear" and raided the restaurants during peak dining hours, detonating flash-bang grenades and instilling widespread fear and panic across the restaurants and the broader San Diego community. The lawmakers called the raid "disturbing" raid and said it reflects a pattern of 'theatrical' immigration enforcement stunts under the Trump Administration They urged ICE's Office of Professional Responsibility to investigate the agents' use of force, tactical decisions, compliance with legal protocols, and coordination with local officials, as well as the operation's impact on local communities and businesses. They also requested information on how the raid aligns with ICE's current immigration enforcement priorities and what guidance agents had received regarding enforcement in civilian or public-facing settings. Padilla released another statement Friday condemning what he called "a series of sudden immigration raids" that occurred Friday across Los Angeles. 'The ICE raids across Los Angeles today are a continuation of a disturbing pattern of extreme and cruel immigration enforcement operations across the country," the statement read. "These indiscriminate raids prove once again that the Trump administration cares about nothing but instilling harm and fear in our communities to drive immigrants into the shadows. It will not work. This fearmongering is not going to change the fact that immigrants are valued members of our communities who contribute to our society and economy, and my office will demand accountability for today's actions.' This is a developing story. This article originally appeared on Palm Springs Desert Sun: ICE presence reported in Palm Springs area Friday
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
MCPARC seeking information after marijuana-themed graffiti found on rail trail
FAIRMONT, (WBOY) — Marion County Parks and Recreation (MCPARC) is asking for the public's help after marijuana-themed graffiti was recently found along the West Fork Rail Trail. According to a Facebook post from MCPARC, the graffiti is located on the bridge that crosses the West Fork River near the Norway neighborhood, which is just west of Fairmont. MCPARC said that these 'senseless acts' cost time and money to repair and that the perpetrator will be prosecuted if they're caught. Alert issued for disguised Chinese vaping products targeting West Virginia kids MCPARC added in the comment section of the post that more vulgar pieces of graffiti were omitted from the post and could be found 'all over the railings' in several places. Local trailgoers also took to the comments, with one claiming that the graffiti wasn't present when they traveled through on June 4. Anyone who has information on who painted the graffiti should contact MCPARC at 304-363-7037. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Former Arkansas police chief who escaped from prison has been recaptured, sheriff's office says
Grant Hardin, the one-time Arkansas police chief who escaped from prison where he was serving sentences for murder and rape, has been recaptured, according to the Izard County Sheriff's Office. Hardin, 56, had been on the run for more than 10 days after breaking out of the prison on May 25, wearing what authorities described as a makeshift law enforcement uniform. Once the police chief of the small town of Gateway, Arkansas, he was serving a 30-year sentence for murder and two 25-year sentences for two counts of rape when he escaped. He was captured Friday afternoon, just 1.5 miles west of the prison grounds, according to a Facebook post from the sheriff's office. Tracking dogs picked up a scent in the area and Hardin was 'apprehended a short time later' by Arkansas law enforcement officers and US Border Patrol, according to a news release from the Arkansas Department of Corrections. 'Thanks to the great work of local, state and federal law enforcement Arkansans can breathe a sigh of relief and I can confirm that violent criminal Grant Hardin is back in custody,' said Gov. Sarah Sanders in the release. 'I am grateful for all law enforcement who contributed to his capture and give special thanks to the Trump administration and Secretary Kristi Noem, who sent a team from Border Patrol that was instrumental in tracking and apprehending Hardin.' His escape incited an intense search effort in the difficult, rocky terrain of northern Arkansas near the prison, hampered by heavy rain. The area includes plentiful caves and old outbuildings, offering a fugitive many places to hide. Authorities said earlier in the week they believed he may have left the state. He had been incarcerated since 2017 after he pleaded guilty to first-degree murder for the death of James Appleton, according to court documents. Officials were using all resources at their disposal, including dogs, drones and aircraft as weather permitted, among other methods, Rand Champion, a spokesperson for the Arkansas Department of Corrections, previously said. Hardin was accused of shooting Appleton, who worked for the City of Gateway's water department, in the head while driving down a road approximately half a mile from his home, documents show. 'He's just an evil, evil man,' Appleton's sister, Cheryl Tillman, told CNN. 'I'm sure the people here in Gateway are worried about him breaking out of prison after what he's done.' Two years after pleading guilty to murder, Hardin pleaded guilty to two counts of rape after his DNA, which was entered into the Arkansas DNA database following his murder plea, was connected to the 1997 rape of schoolteacher Amy Harrison in the nearby city of Rogers, court documents show. 'He's extremely dangerous,' former Benton County prosecutor Nathan Smith told CNN affiliate KHBS. 'He's already proven that he has no moral core or center that would prevent him from doing anything.' Hardin had a long career in law enforcement and briefly served as police chief of Gateway, a tiny Arkansas town with a population of just over 400. But many of his jobs ended with him being fired or forced to resign, the Arkansas Democrat Gazette reported. At the time of Appleton's murder, Hardin was a corrections officer at the Northwest Arkansas Community Correction Center in Fayetteville, about an hour south of Gateway, according to the Gazette. His escape came days after a group of 10 inmates at a New Orleans jail made a similarly brazen escape, prompting a national manhunt. Two inmates are still at large more than two weeks after the jailbreak. This story has been updated with additional information.