Simmons: Road Rage & Casino Beach Chaos

As spring break crowds overwhelm Pensacola Beach, tensions are spilling onto Escambia County roads — including three serious road rage confrontations in three consecutive days, one of which ended in a shooting. Sheriff Chip Simmons joined the podcast We Don’t Color on the Dog to break down both the violent incidents and his growing concerns about the surging beach crowds

Spring Break Crowds Swamp Casino Beach

The road rage concerns coincided with another challenge: massive, unsupervised crowds of teenagers gathering at Casino Beach. An online invite drew between 800 and 1,000 young people to the parking lot on consecutive weekend nights—many of them teens, ages 14-16, with no adult supervision.

Called out: Deputies responded to disturbances, multiple fights and a report of shots fired that turned out to be unfounded. Five arrests were made. The Casino Beach parking lot and boardwalk parking lot were shut down as a precaution.

  • “If you misbehave on our beach, we will put you in jail,” Simmons said. But he was careful to acknowledge the limits of enforcement in a free society. “You can go to a parking lot, you can stand around, you can drive your car. There’s nothing illegal about that.”

Simmons placed significant responsibility on parents. “If you don’t know where your 14-, 15-, 16-year-old kid’s going, you’re part of the problem,” he said. “You need to have those conversations with your kids.”

  • The sheriff noted that surveillance cameras are being installed at Casino Beach, though they weren’t operational in time for the initial spring break surge. A traffic management plan is also being developed to prevent the northbound gridlock that slowed law enforcement response.

“We have a lot of resources out there, a lot of cameras out there, and we have a game plan to react as quickly as we can,” Simmons said.

Three Days, Three Incidents

On March 19, two vehicles traveling in the same direction on Pine Forest Road were involved in a collision when one car veered into the other, making physical contact. Investigators are still working to identify the driver.

The previous day, a woman escalated a road dispute to a dangerous level when she pointed a loaded gun from her car into another vehicle. “We are an open carry state, obviously, but you cannot brandish a weapon. You certainly can’t point one at an individual,” Simmons said. An arrest was made.

  • The most serious incident occurred on Fairfield Drive, where a truck and a car became entangled in a lane-merge dispute on March 17. The truck driver got out multiple times—hurling a cup, then trash from his truck bed onto the other car. On his final approach, he walked up to the driver’s door and punched through the window. He was shot twice.

Common Sense: Simmons distilled three pieces of hard-won advice for drivers. First, don’t let road rage happen in the first place. Second, stay in your vehicle no matter what. Third, never approach someone else’s car in anger.

  • “Never approach a door or a car like that,” Simmons warned, “because you’re liable to get your butt shot.”

He acknowledged a broader societal problem driving the trend. “We just seem to be so offended so easily by everything,” the sheriff said. “We can’t take the time to cool off. People are less patient. We’ve got to get a handle on this as a society, not just here in Escambia County but everywhere in our country.”…

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