The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Police: Woman stole ambulance Early morning, 40-mile chase from Waffle House ended with 58-year-old suspect being arrested.

- By Henri Hollis henri.hollis@ajc.com

A 58-year-old woman who was arrested after police were led on a high-speed, multicount­y chase in a stolen ambulance Tuesday is accused of taking the vehicle from the parking lot of a Waffle House in Mcdonough, authoritie­s said.

The incident began just before 1:15 a.m. when an ambulance was called to the Waffle House on Hampton Road near the intersecti­on with Avalon Parkway, according to a Mcdonough police report. As the ambulance crew arrived and were preparing to treat their patient, a woman approached and said she needed an ambulance herself.

The paramedics told the woman, later identified as Andrea Bryant, they needed to treat someone else and they would call her a second ambulance. They went inside the restaurant to attend to the patient, but Bryant got into their ambulance and drove away, the report said. Security cameras captured video that corroborat­ed the emergency medical crew’s accounts.

The Waffle House is in a busy commercial area just south of I-75. According to the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office, Bryant drove the vehicle south on I-75 all the way to the I-475 split, about 40 miles. During the chase, the sheriff ’s office said she was driving 86 to 88 mph.

Bryant continued south on I-475, where deputies used deflation devices to blow two of the ambulance’s tires, the sheriff ’s office said. She continued for another mile before she lost control of the ambulance, stopped and ran away. She was taken into custody after a brief search.

Bryant was booked into the Monroe jail and faces one misdemeano­r count of fleeing or attempting to elude along with multiple traffic offenses in that county, the sheriff ’s office said. According to the Mcdonough police report, she will also be charged with motor vehicle theft and obstructio­n of an emergency medical technician. She remains in jail without bond.

Ambulance theft is a surprising­ly common problem that has forced multiple agencies around the country to address the risk with technology and policy changes. Despite the high likelihood that thieves will be arrested and face serious felony charges, some people “are lured into the ‘joyride’ aspect” of the crime, according to Ohio Ambulance, an independen­t company.

Even more serious charges could be levied against ambulance thieves if investigat­ors find that they were attempting to steal narcotics or use the vehicle for terroristi­c purposes, the company said. A recent case in South Carolina led officials to charge a suspected ambulance thief with attempted murder after he allegedly drove the vehicle toward a sheriff setting up “stop sticks.”

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