The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Front-end loader duel ends with an arrest

Shrewd move by officer results in no serious injuries.

- By Henri Hollis henri.hollis@ajc.com

Sometimes you fight fire with fire, and sometimes you must fight a front-end loader with another frontend loader.

A quick-thinking Gwinnett County police officer used a local waste management company’s front-end loader to disable an identical piece of heavy equipment driven by a disgruntle­d former employee Saturday, the law enforcemen­t agency said.

The suspect, who was arrested on multiple charges, is accused of stealing the piece of constructi­on equipment from his former employer near Duluth around 11 a.m., Gwinnett police said.

The man allegedly led Gwinnett officers and Georgia State Patrol troopers on a low-speed chase along multiple busy public roads in the 75,000-pound vehicle.

The front-end loader could only be stopped by a similar piece of equipment, so a Gwinnett officer pursued the suspect in a second front-end loader volunteere­d by the waste management business.

With an escort of patrol cars, the officer was able to catch up to the stolen vehicle and tip it over, ending the pursuit.

Officers had been called to the waste management company’s address, where the suspect was driving around his former employer’s property in the loader, police said. Investigat­ors later learned the man had been fired in September.

Witnesses told police the suspect had recently returned to the business and commandeer­ed a piece of heavy equipment during a similar incident, but he had not left the property that time.

The officer who responded Saturday tried to stop the man, but he continued driving and eventually turned onto the road, police said.

Video footage from the officer’s body-worn camera showed him shouting and waving as the suspect drove past him.

Police said the man’s driving was unpredicta­ble and erratic, including abrupt reversals and U-turns, as he led officers on a mileslong chase. They blocked traffic along the roads where the chase was happening to keep the public out of danger.

Video released by police shows how at least one officer had to quickly accelerate out of the path of the front-end loader as it came around a corner and bore down on him.

Eventually, the officer who responded to the initial call got into another frontend loader and drove after the suspect with a garbage truck and several patrol cars escorting him, police said. Once he caught up, the officer made several attempts to stop the other vehicle.

Dashboard camera footage from a patrol car that was following the clashing machines caught an officer muttering, “This is unbelievab­le.”

About 5 miles from the waste management company, the officer finally flipped the runaway loader onto its side.

The suspect was apprehende­d and taken to the hospital for a medical evaluation, police said. He was then booked into the Gwinnett jail on counts of criminal trespass, theft by taking, fleeing or attempting to elude, reckless driving, second-degree criminal damage to property and obstructio­n.

No one was injured and no other vehicles were damaged during the incident.

 ?? HENRI HOLLIS/HENRI.HOLLIS@AJC.COM ?? A disgruntle­d former employee at a Norcross waste management company led authoritie­s on a chase Saturday in a stolen front-end loader, Gwinnett police said.
HENRI HOLLIS/HENRI.HOLLIS@AJC.COM A disgruntle­d former employee at a Norcross waste management company led authoritie­s on a chase Saturday in a stolen front-end loader, Gwinnett police said.

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