MOORHEAD, Minn.-Somewhat surprising: 20 people got tickets for going 100 mph or more during an enforcement blitz last month in Minnesota.

Really kind of shocking: One guy got a ticket for going 100 mph over the speed limit. As in 155 mph.

That happened July 16 on a rural road between Detroit Lakes and Moorhead. The ticket issued to a Kindred, N.D., motorcyclist was among 16,580 speeding tickets written during the July 7-23 special enforcement period, according to the state Department of Public Safety. Another 1,781 seat belt citations were written.

Dustyn Lee Galbreath, 21, was one of two motorcyclists who fled a sheriff's deputy on Clay County Road 10, according to a felony fleeing complaint filed against him. A state trooper overheard the chase report and joined in. Soon there were several squad cars, with lights on and sirens blaring, pursuing the motorcycles 30 miles into Moorhead.

One trooper encountered the bikes as they blasted through the stop sign in Downer, Minn.

"Trooper Thompson attempted to catch up to the bikes, who passed an officer in a no-passing zone and did a 'wheelie' as they drove past," a Clay County deputy wrote in the criminal complaint. "The motorcycles didn't stop for Thompson's lights and siren in his marked patrol vehicle, and they traveled as fast as 155 mph."

The speed limit on the two-lane road is 55 mph, according to the State Patrol.

The pursuit continued through Sabin, Minn., and into Moorhead, where one of the motorcyclists slowed down and pulled into an antique shop's parking lot.

Galbreath "seemed unconcerned as he dismounted his bike," the criminal complaint said. "Thompson approached with his gun drawn."

The trooper eventually took Galbreath into custody but not without resistance. Galbreath tensed up his body, refused to comply with commands and, once on the ground, kept his arms under his body so the trooper couldn't get the cuffs on, according to the complaint.

He also blew 0.04 on a blood-alcohol test, the complaint said. That level indicated he'd been drinking but was within the legal driving limit.

An attempt to reach Galbraith was unsuccessful.

Since 2015, Galbreath has been found guilty on citations for reckless driving, speeding, operator failure to wear seat belt and twice for driving without insurance, according to North Dakota court records.

Each of those charges came while he was living in Dickinson, N.D.

The complaint doesn't mention what happened to the other motorcyclist.

Other super-speeders during the enforcement period were clocked at 121 mph in Rice County, 120 mph in McLeod County and 110 mph in Ramsey County.

One driver, ticketed for driving 109 mph in a 65 mph zone, used the excuse of being late for dinner with grandma, according to the state patrol. Another, going 74 in a 55 mph zone, claimed to be going to a funeral but was wearing gym clothes.

The 16,580 ticketed was about average for a similar enforcement period, DPS said.