CHEYENNE â The hot-rodding starts every day after 5 p.m. at the Jack C. Spiker Parking Structure downtown on 17th Street, but itâs particularly active on Friday nights.
Brian Snyder, who owns Bohemian Metals directly across from the garage and lives in an upstairs apartment above his store, has come to expect it every weekend over the years.
But this past Friday night, something unexpected happened in the midst of the usual noisy, Friday night shenanigans.
âI heard this guy pull into the garage, and it was one of the regular guys,â Snyder told Cowboy State Daily. âHeâs one who likes to drive throughout the garage and throttle his motorcycle up to the point where it sounds like itâs going to blow up. So, lots of RPMs, which is followed by a backfiring pop.â
That often sets off all the car alarms in the parking garage, Snyder added.
âItâs like a game,â he said. âHe does that to set off all the alarms.â
Friday afternoon, right before 5 p.m., Snyder heard one round of that usual game. Then he heard something else, something quite unusual. It was an explosive sound, much louder than usual.
He knew immediately that something terrible had happened.
He headed to the garage immediately after the sound to see what had happened.Â
An EMS vehicle arrived on the scene at about the same time.
The driver of the motorcycle, Snyder saw, had been unable to stop in time. Heâd launched, full speed ahead, right into the south concrete wall, which is furthest from Snyderâs business.
âWhat I had heard was the impact of his motorcycle,â Snyder said.
Ticketed For Reckless Driving
According to a statement from the Cheyenne Police Department, the rider involved in the accident was transported by ambulance to a hospital for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries and ticketed for careless driving, riding without a motorcycle endorsement, and failure to provide proof of insurance.
A motorcycle endorsement is put on a driverâs license to authorize operation of a motorcycle.
According to the manâs statement to police, the bike accelerated into the south wall of the garage after he pulled in the clutch and revved the engine.
âThis incident serves as an important reminder of the responsibility that comes with operating any motor vehicle â especially a motorcycle,â Cheyenne Police Chief Mark Francisco said. âReckless behavior not only puts the rider at risk but also endangers the safety of others.â
Snyder said he does feel sorry for the injured man, even as he feels itâs a cautionary tale for those who have been using the Spiker garage as a playground for their vehicles. If they get the message, which he doubts. After the accident was cleaned up, more motorists arrived for more noisy hot-rodding in the garage, seemingly unaware of the accident that had occurred earlier.
âIt starts every evening after about 4:30 p.m.,â Snyder said. âAnd itâs summertime, too, so it also gets worse during the summer months versus winter months.â
Everyone has been cooped up, Snyder said. He gets it. Summer comes, and more people are ready to blow off steam somewhere.Â
But itâs a dangerous place to do so, Snyder said, and his concern is that more people are going to get hurt.
City Taking Additional Steps
Cheyenne Mayor Patrick Collins told Cowboy State Daily he was disappointed to hear that hot-rodding behavior continues in Spiker garage, and said the city is taking some additional steps to curb the behavior.
Those steps include the recent approval of $100,000 in overtime, which will be used, in part, for additional patrols in the Spiker garage.
âWe all feel like that is not appropriate and really disappointing, especially for the gentleman who owns Bohemian Metals,â Collins said. âHe lives above his building, and that noise keeps him up at night. And nothing frustrates me more than people whose behavior is like that.â
Collins said itâs his hope that people in the community who witness such behavior in the garage will take note of the license plate number and report it to police, to help catch the culprits.
âWeâve got great cameras in there now,â Collins said. âAnd so, we have been able to reach out to some folks based on that and have a conversation with them about the proper etiquette. It is unfortunate the effect that has on people who live in those areas and who work in those areas.â
Ward I Councilman Scott Roybal told Cowboy State Daily heâs been talking with people around the garage, and said the police chief has told him heâs looking at changes to Cheyenneâs noise ordinance.
âEvery time I talk to somebody who lives right around there, weâve had complaints about the noise,â he said. âThe âmosquitoâ cars will go up in there and theyâll start running around, and they do it in the evenings, and motorcycles, too, stuff like that.â
Other actions at the garage have aimed to improve visibility in the garage, Ward I Councilman Jeff White told Cowboy State Daily.
âWeâve spent almost a million dollars renovating the bathrooms there, putting in security cameras,â he said. âWe do have a private security company that does drive through there at certain points of the day. And I know the police have increased their patrols in Spiker garage.â
White said the council has also talked about possibly putting gates on the entrance of the garage, to force people to slow down when leaving and entering. There wouldnât necessarily be a charge for going through the gate, he added. It would just be a slow-down mechanism.
Ramping Up Traffic Enforcement Across Cheyenne
Part of the $100,000 for overtime will also be dedicated to speed limit and red-light enforcement, Ward I Councilman Pete Laybourn told Cowboy State Daily.Â
Laybourn is part of a committee thatâs working on various traffic issues across Cheyenne, including Spiker garage.
âThe parking garage has our full attention,â he said. âWe will continue our efforts because itâs the heart of downtown. Itâs important parking. We have parking issues we need to work on, so weâre not ignoring it, we just havenât fully found the answers, but I think weâre going to have to have more enforcement directly in it.â
Laybourn himself is a downtown property owner and said he agrees that the noise downtown on weekends, in particular, has become particularly disturbing.
âIt starts first thing in the morning and runs until midnight or 2 a.m.,â he said. âAnd thatâs really not â thereâs no good in it. This antisocial behavior didnât used to exist, so we need to respond to it.â
The traffic issues in Cheyenne, he added, are not just restricted to the garage. An increasing segment of Cheyenneâs population have begun treating the highway as a performance arena. A place to pop wheelies and tailpipes on a Friday or Saturday night, as well as speeding around much faster than the posted limit allows.
âThat really is serious, because if you drive the same streets as I am, if youâre going the speed limit, youâre getting passed,â he said.
Modified mufflers, meanwhile, are something heâs learning is a problem not just regionally, but even internationally. More and more people are modifying vehicles in questionable ways, that lead to noise and other problems.
Laybourn said Cheyenne has declared special traffic enforcement zones on Central and Warren avenues. Council members also approved a system Monday night that will analyze traffic patterns in real time, based on GPS data from cell phones, as well as other metrics.Â
The system wonât identify individual users in real time, but the metadata can help highlight where the most egregious violations are taking place, so officers can be placed in the best locations for making a difference in all these âantisocialâ driving behaviors.
Zero Tolerance For Speeding, Wheelies
Laramie County Sheriff Brian Kozak told Cowboy State Daily the Sheriffâs Department will be teaming up to help Cheyenne Police Department on traffic enforcement issues. That includes additional patrols of Spiker garage.
âOur deputies are actually driving through the parking garage, like if theyâre coming to the Sheriffâs office or leaving the Sheriffâs office,â Kozak said. âAnd then we also started a traffic unit, a traffic enforcement team.â
Laramie County has assigned three deputies to that team to work with the Police Departmentâs traffic unit on proactive speed and red-light enforcement.
Two motorcycles have been donated to the Sheriffâs office for those officers, Kozak added.
âItâs more effective if we work together as a team,â he said. âSo thatâs what weâre doing.â
Kozak added that heâs been hearing more complaints lately on Saturday nights that motorcycles are racing up and down Warren and Central and popping wheelies.
âSo, both the Sheriffâs Office and the city PD are also teaming up on that,â Kozak said. âFor a high visible presence and really having a zero tolerance approach on that kind of reckless driving behavior.â
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Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.





