Dallas resident and veteran Dynell Lane wants Dallas City Council members to help speed up the investigation into the police officers caught on camera mocking him at a pizzeria last June.
Lane told the city鈥檚 Community Police Oversight Board in August two off-duty officers wouldn鈥檛 let him use the bathroom at Serious Pizza in Deep Ellum June 10, 2023 despite showing officers and a restaurant manager documentation detailing his disability caused by injuries during his deployments in the Middle East.
Lane said Wednesday he then called 911 for help and was still denied access to the bathroom by the two officers. He then urinated himself, which he told the officers as he was leaving the restaurant. Body camera footage shows four officers, including two on duty, laughing about the incident.
鈥淚鈥檓 asking for assistance,鈥 Lane told council members at Wednesday鈥檚 meeting. 鈥淭his is why my provider provided me these documents to present this to these officers, to assist me as public servants.鈥
The Restroom Access Act, or Ally鈥檚 Law, requires retail establishments to provide employee restroom access to those with eligible medical conditions.
An initial investigation cleared all four officers, but the Dallas Police Department said in August the case was reopened by the department鈥檚 Internal Affairs Division. The investigation was temporarily paused for an unspecified amount of time due to an employee on medical leave, but police spokesperson Kristin Lowman told 四虎影院 in February it has since resumed.

Police spokesperson Kristin Lowman said in an email the case is still open until discipline 鈥 if any 鈥 is issued against the officers.
"No administrative investigation is complete until it has been reviewed and signed off on by the Chief of Police or their designee," she wrote.
After his comments, city leaders told Lane someone would be helping him with his concerns. District 3 Councilman Zarin Gracey thanked Lane for his military service and his courage for talking about the incident.
Gracey also called on Dallas Police Chief Eddie Garcia to clear any unnecessary red tape that may be delaying the investigation into Lane鈥檚 case.
鈥淲hen you have a community who doesn鈥檛 hate the police but are longing for a relationship, these type of delays hinder that relationship,鈥 Gracey said.
Lane鈥檚 case is also tied up in confusion over the police oversight board鈥檚 authority to investigate complaints against police officers.
Anyone with a complaint may go to internal affairs or the Office of Community Police Oversight. But Elaine Chandler, the office鈥檚 interim director, told board members in February the board cannot investigate a complaint if IAD hasn't already done so.
That鈥檚 according to what Chandler said is a confidential legal opinion from the City Attorney鈥檚 Office.
The opinion runs contrary to how the board says it鈥檚 operated for years, though Chandler said the restriction on investigations had long been in place through a city ordinance.
Members also pointed out enforcing that ordinance could have precluded them from investigating Lane鈥檚 case.
Councilman Jesse Moreno thanked his fellow District 2 representative on the CPOB Jonathan Maples for his work looking into Lane鈥檚 case. Maples and other board members why the investigation seems to be taking so long.
鈥淚 know that I believe this is coming back to (the Community Police Oversight Board) next month, and I hope again for a speedy resolution to that,鈥 Moreno said.
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