The Boyertown Area Times

Driver charged in Rt. 100 road rage

- By Carl Hessler Jr. chessler@21st-centurymed­ia.com @MontcoCour­tNews on Twitter

A Pottstown man fired a handgun at another driver during a “road rage” incident that lasted for several miles along busy Route 100, the gunshot being heard by 911 dispatcher­s who were called during the traffic dispute, authoritie­s alleged.

Christophe­r J. Cossel, 31, of the 700 block of Hamilton Street, was arraigned before District Court Judge Maurice H. Saylor on charges of aggravated and simple assault, firearms not to be carried without a license, persons not to possess a firearm, recklessly endangerin­g other persons, disorderly conduct and harassment in connection with the 7:30 a.m. Sept. 22, 2017, incident on Route 100 that played out in Montgomery and Berks counties.

Cossel was remanded to the Montgomery County Correction­al Facility in lieu of $99,000 cash bail to await his Nov. 30 preliminar­y hearing on the charges.

An investigat­ion began when Upper Pottsgrove police responded to reports of an ongoing “road rage/traffic dispute” involving two vehicles and the firing of gunshots on northbound Route 100.

The investigat­ion determined Cossel, operating a 2000 Dodge Caravan and carrying a female passenger and her 8-month-old child, turned onto Route 100 from North State Street while a woman in a 2011 Chevrolet Malibu was traveling northbound on Route

100. Authoritie­s said it’s unclear if the vehicles had contact at the intersecti­on, however, neither vehicle pulled over to the side of the road and both continued traveling north on Route 100.

At the next intersecti­on, Route 100 and State Street, Cossel allegedly drove his vehicle onto the right lane shoulder of the roadway and “maneuvered his vehicle in an aggressive manner,” steering toward the female victim’s vehicle in the right lane, county Detective Mark Minzola and Upper Pottsgrove Police Chief Francis Wheatley alleged in the arrest affidavit.

“This maneuver forced (the victim) to steer her vehicle from the right lane into the left lane, nearly striking the concrete median in an effort to avoid contact with Cossel’s Caravan,” Minzola and Wheatley alleged, adding both vehicles continued to travel at a high rate of speed as they approached Farmington Avenue.

At Farmington Avenue, Cossel passed the victim’s vehicle, positionin­g his Caravan directly in front of the victim’s vehicle, and he then “brake checked” his vehicle, causing the victim’s Malibu to collide with the rear of Cossel’s Caravan, according to the criminal complaint.

Prior to arriving at Route 100 and Moyer Road, Cossel allegedly removed a .25-caliber semi-automatic handgun from his center console, “manipulate­d the firearm’s action to chamber a round, then placed the handgun into his pants pocket,” according to the arrest affidavit.

At Route 100 and Moyer Road, both vehicles stopped for a red signal and Cossel exited his vehicle and walked toward the victim’s vehicle while “screaming and waving his arms,” detectives alleged. Afterward, Cossel got back into his vehicle and both vehicles continued northbound on Route 100.

During the ongoing incident, according to court documents, the victim called 911 and stated to dispatcher­s, “he’s trying to kill me.”

When the vehicles reached the intersecti­on of Route 100 and Township Line Road in Colebrookd­ale Township, Berks County, “Cossel exited his vehicle, stood near the center of the roadway and fired at least one gunshot from his .25-caliber semiautoma­tic handgun toward the direction of (the victim’s) Chevrolet Malibu,” detectives alleged.

No one was struck by the gunfire.

Witnesses who observed the ongoing road rage incident told detectives they believed Cossel’s Caravan was “the aggressive vehicle.”

The female passenger in Cossel’s vehicle also called 911 during the ongoing road rage incident, with Cossel being heard in the background, and several times the dispatcher suggested to them that they pull off to the side of the road and avoid any further problems.

“Cossel refused to pull over and insisted on following (the victim),” detectives alleged.

After arriving at the intersecti­on of Route 100 and Township Line Road, 911 dispatcher­s heard Cossel state, “get somebody out here or I’ll deal with this by myself,” and “hang up the phone. They don’t want to help us, I’ll do it myself,” according to the criminal complaint.

“Following the last remark on this 911 recording, the sound of a door can be heard, followed by the sound of a single gunshot being fired,” detectives alleged, adding Cossel is then heard uttering an obscenity, followed by the sound of a door closing.

When detectives questioned Cossel he admitted to firing a single gunshot, which he described as being a “potshot,” aimed at the tire of the victim’s vehicle. Cossel also told detectives that after firing the gunshot, he drove to a storage unit he had in Bally where he “washed my hands with cleaner” in the event law enforcemen­t officers tested his hands for gunshot residue, according to the criminal complaint.

Detectives alleged Cossel was not permitted to possess a weapon as a result of a prior drug conviction.

If convicted of all the charges at a trial, Cossel faces a possible maximum sentence of 16½ to 33 years in prison.

 ??  ?? Christophe­r Cossel
Christophe­r Cossel

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