The Columbus Dispatch

Police: Armed robbery suspects crash stolen car into cruiser

- Eric Lagatta

Two armed robbery suspects are in custody after Columbus police say the suspects crashed a stolen vehicle into a police cruiser Tuesday morning — injuring the officer — during a pursuit with Franklin County Sheriff ’s deputies on the Northeast Side.

Columbus police first were called at 7:15 a.m. Tuesday to the 3600 block of Karl Road on the city’s Northeast Side on the report of an armed robbery at a nearby business. About two hours later, Franklin County Sheriff ’s deputies and Clinton Township police located the suspects’ vehicle, a Kia sedan that was reportedly stolen, said Sgt. David Scarpitti, a spokesman for the Columbus Division of Police.

Deputies and police began pursuing the vehicle after its occupants refused to stop, Scarpitti said. While Columbus police officers were responding to provide aid, the suspects’ vehicle crashed into a police cruiser at the intersecti­on of Walford Street and Elmore Avenue near Cleveland Avenue, about a mile east of where the robbery was first reported.

The crash resulted in significan­t damage to both vehicles, and the lone officer was cut out of his cruiser by medics after becoming pinned, Scarpitti said. The two suspects fled the scene on foot but were later taken into custody, he added.

Scarpitti said both the officer and the two suspects were treated for non-lifethreat­ening injuries at a nearby hospital.

The suspects have not yet been charged as the investigat­ion is ongoing, Scarpitti said.

Columbus police are investigat­ing the robbery on Karl Road, as well as the reported stolen vehicle that the suspects were driving. Franklin County Sheriff’s deputies are investigat­ing the crash.

This is not the first time this month that a Columbus police officer was injured in a crash.

On Feb. 19, an officer was seriously hurt when he was hit around 9:05 p.m. by a vehicle while he was standing along Interstate 670 helping a disabled motorist near the 4th Street ramp.

In a video posted to the Fraternal Order of Police Capitol City Lodge No. 9’s Youtube page, President Jeff Simpson criticized what he views as the lack of consequenc­es for those teenagers who have made sport of stealing late-model Kias and Hyundais — which have become infamous for the ease with which they can be stolen — and using them to commit other crimes.

“It’s very frustratin­g to say the least to have this continue over and over again,” Simpson said in the video as he can be seen standing near the scene of Tuesday’s wreck. “The problem is that there’s no consequenc­es for juvenile crime in this county.”

elagatta@dispatch.com

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