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   LAS VEGAS (KLAS) — The man accused of causing a crash that   
   killed a mother and her two children last weekend was cited   
   months earlier for driving more than double the speed limit and   
   was let off with a ticket, according to documents the 8 News Now   
   Investigators obtained.   
      
   On Feb. 27, 2023, a Las Vegas Metro police officer cited Darryl   
   Smith, 36, for reckless driving for “traveling at speed over   
   double posted speed limit of 25 mph” on McLeod Drive near   
   Tompkins Avenue, documents said. The citation indicates Smith   
   was driving the same pickup truck involved in last Sunday’s   
   triple fatal crash.   
      
   The officer cited Smith for driving 52 mph in the 25-mph zone,   
   documents said. Records show when Smith appeared in court on the   
   charge, it was knocked down to speeding 11-15 miles over the   
   limit. Smith pleaded guilty to the charge.   
      
   Judge Ann Zimmerman then ordered Smith to attend the Clark   
   County coroner’s DUI program and perform 48 hours of community   
   service, records said. Smith fulfilled those requirements by   
   October, records said, and the court closed the case.   
      
   On Jan. 7 around 5:50 p.m., Smith allegedly told first   
   responders that he had wine and cough syrup before crashing his   
   pickup truck into Rebecca Post, killing her and her two   
   children, documents said.   
      
   Before officers’ arrival, Henderson firefighters and EMTs   
   reported that Smith appeared intoxicated and that he had   
   stumbled out of his truck. When Smith got into the ambulance, he   
   smelled of alcohol and was asked if he had been drinking, a   
   police report said.   
      
   Smith told first responders, “I had a pretty good amount,” and   
   said he had three glasses of wine and cough syrup, police said.   
      
   Smith faces three counts of DUI resulting in death and one count   
   of reckless driving resulting in substantial bodily harm,   
   records showed.   
      
   In 2008, A Metro police officer cited Smith for DUI. In that   
   case, the officer said Smith admitted to “smoking a blunt of   
   marijuana,” was speaking with slurred speech and could not stand   
   straight, documents said.   
      
   In 2009, Smith pleaded guilty and a judge ordered him to attend   
   DUI school and a victim impact panel.   
      
   Last year, the NTSB cited Nevada’s failure to address drivers’   
   repeated traffic infractions, citing “systemic deficiencies,   
   including routine plea agreements that alter of drop violations,   
   inaccurate driver records, failure to accurately track citations   
   and delays in reporting convictions.”   
      
   Gary Dean Robinson, 59, of North Las Vegas, was behind the wheel   
   of a Dodge Challenger in January 2022 when he ran a red light at   
   103 mph at the intersection of Commerce Street and Cheyenne   
   Avenue, crashing into a minivan carrying a family of seven.   
   Robinson, his passenger, and all seven people in the van died.   
   Robinson had cocaine and PCP in his system at the time of the   
   crash, investigators said.   
      
   According to court records, Robinson had pleaded guilty just   
   days earlier for speeding up to 10 miles over the limit on Dec.   
   9, 2021. He paid a $150 fine. Records the 8 News Now   
   Investigators obtained reveal Robinson was actually traveling 19   
   miles over the speed limit before the officer cited him on a   
   lesser charge.   
      
   Though he was stopped as many as five times for speeding,   
   Robinson’s driving record included just one documented speeding   
   ticket, the NTSB reported. The speeding tickets were lowered to   
   other violations, records the 8 News Now Investigators reviewed   
   indicated.   
      
   In 2021, the Nevada Legislature made speeding tickets a civil   
   violation, meaning defendants no longer have to go before a   
   judge. The process is streamlined online and no longer carries   
   jail time.   
      
   Smith’s attorney, Thomas Moskal, declined to comment until   
      
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