Occasionally, in the NASB95 the words of Christ stop being red.
Welcome @John Spraker
Can you give some examples please?
Graham
How do you know?
One of the problems with red letter editions is, the original manuscripts didn't use quotation marks or any other indication of who was speaking. Often, it can be determined from context, but sometimes, where the quotation ends and the narrative begins is very difficult to determine. (John 3 is a good example, with Jesus' discourse stopping at different points in different versions).
So this may not be an error, it may be the translators' best effort to indicate which words were Christ's and which words were the narrators (both equally inspired by the HS, by the way).