Propane Refill Station At Costco In The Holiday Season In A Sunny Day In North Georgia
RINGGOLD, GEORGIA - DECEMBER 04: (AUDIO OMITTED) Costco provides propane refill service on December 04, 2023 in Ringgold, Georgia. (Footage By WW News/Getty Images)
STATION WAGON INTO TREE (2008)
Police dashcam video from a chase through Manchester August 20th reveals more about what happened. A camera mounted on a Manchester police car shows the pursuit along Main St. The video shows the car weaving through traffic, sometimes into the oncoming lane. Authorities say the chase began after 16-year-old Jonathan Morehead of Platteville, Wisconsin allegedly stole fuel from a gas station. Morehead eventually crashed his car into a building. He faces multiple traffic violation charges. His case has not gone to court yet.
Car travel recording camera.
Car travel recording camera.
STATION WAGON POT CHASE (2002)
A CHASE IN THE SAN ANTONIO AREA OF A STATION WAGON THAT ENDS UP IN A FIELD WITH THREE KIDS RUNNING. THE CAR ENDS UP HAVING A LOT OF DOPE INSIDE. THE DOPE IS SEEN ON CAMERA AT THE END.
OFFICERS RAMMED ON SIDE OF ROAD (2002)
Amazing footage caught on tape caught on tape dashcam surveillance of officers on side of road being struck by an oncoming car on highway! Very clear dramatic footage! BOTH OFFICERS ARE SEVERELY INJURED.
Dash Cam records by monitor off in a car while rain drop on the windshield
4K Video Close-up of Dash Cam records by monitor off in a car while rain drop on the windshield
AW SHOOT HONEY (6-7-1992)
DURING A NIGHT TIME TRAFFIC STOP, AN OFFICER WAS PERFORMING A DUI TEST ON A MAN WHEN HIS VEHICLE'S PASSENGER, HIS WIFE, JUMPS OUT OF THE TRUCK WITH A GUN. THE OFFICERS, AND HER HUSBAND, SCATTER TO GET AWAY FROM THE SHOTS. THE WOMAN IS FINALLY RESTRAINED AND BOTH SHE AND HER HUSBAND ARE ARRESTED. THE HUSBAND IS CHARGED WITH DUI AND HIS WIFE IS CHARGED WITH DUI AND ASSAULT WITH A DEADLY WEAPON.
WS Takes a train ride with a car
Wide shot of taking a train ride with a car.
DRUNK RAINY STATION WAGON (1998)
THIS IS AN EXCELLENT CHASE OF A DRUNK WHO IS ALL OVER THE ROAD. HE ENDS UP WITH A COUPLE OF FLAT FRONT TIRES AND GETS PITTED IN THE END.
video recorder in modern car recording while traveling
video recorder in modern car recording while traveling.Cctv
INT. Cockpit of White Cessna 208B Grand Caravan single engine prop plane; n-d male pilot (legs and hands visible) operates various switches and levers; handheld
INT. Cockpit of White Cessna 208B Grand Caravan single engine prop plane; n-d male pilot (legs and hands visible) operates various switches and levers; handheld
DRIVER TAKES ON COPS WITH CAR 2008
He took police for a wild ride on I-95 smashing into a couple of police cars and one man's Mercedes. Most of the pursuit was captured by the police cameras. It was 2 in the afternoon Memorial Day, and Boynton Beach police officers had just started getting reports of a reckless driver. "Oh my God. Oh my God, he almost hit us", said one woman who called herself Stephanie on a 9-1-1 call. "This guy ran another guy off the road." Several callers describe a white station wagon weaving in and out of traffic near Seacrest Avenue and Boynton Beach Boulevard. "I think he's really drunk or something; he just pushed us right off the road," said Jason Gaynor, another person who called 9-1-1. Police say it was Mike Timmons behind the wheel. At first, the officers say they were trying to pull Timmons over on Boynton Beach Boulevard but had no plans to chase up I-95. They followed him to the on-ramp, and, then, bang. Timmons rear-ended a Mercedes. Cops say he had plenty of room to avoid the collision. "He intentionally ran into the back of the car. A whole other ball game," said Major Frank Briganti. At that point, officers say, they knew Timmins was desperate and dangerous. Once on the interstate, he slammed on his breaks trying to get one of the police cruisers to hit him. The police drove around him and attempted to box him in. But, he didn't stop there. He swerved into one police car, pulled a u-turn on I-95 and ran head first into another police car. "He just rammed my car. He just ran into one of our patrol vehicles. He ran into several of our vehicles," said one of the officers involved in the chase. Timmins faces a bunch of charges, including reckless driving and aggravated battery. The officers who were hit are a little banged up, but they'll be ok. Cops: 'Erratic' motorist hits 3 police cars during I-95 chase Fort Lauderdale, FL, "Sun-Sentinel"; Boynton Beach -- An "erratic" driver hit three police cruisers and another car in a chase through the city that ended on Interstate 95 Monday afternoon. About 2 p.m., Boynton Beach Police responded to reports of a white station wagon weaving in and out of traffic while going south on Seacrest Boulevard, police spokeswoman Stephanie Slater said. The car continued west on Boynton Beach Boulevard, turned onto the ramp to I-95 and hit a Mercedes, Slater said. The station wagon drove north on I-95, with Boynton Beach police in pursuit. During the chase, the station wagon "rammed" three police cars before the driver stopped and tried to escape on foot, Slater said. Mike Timmins, 46, of 1191 S. Ocean Boulevard in Delray Beach, was quickly captured and found to be in possession of marijuana, Slater said. Simmons faces charges of aggravated assault, aggravated battery, reckless driving, leaving the scene of an accident, possession of marijuana and resisting arrest without violence. No police officers were injured in the pursuit and the driver of the Mercedes was not injured, Slater said.
ROB BANK, WILD CHASE, CRASH END (2008)
Two men accused of armed robbery of a bank with a gun and leading police on a high-speed chase Monday were being held in Botsford Hospital with broken bones and internal injuries following the crash that ended their getaway, according to Livonia police reports. A 33-year-old Detroit man and a 29-year-old Southfield man may be arraigned in their hospital room on the charges of bank robbery, police reported. According to reports, two men entered the Charter One Bank at 28999 Five Mile at 9:14 a.m. Monday. One of the men approached a teller counting night deposits, put a handkerchief over his face, pulled a pistol and demanded the money she was counting. She gave the man the deposit money and money from her drawer. The report also said she placed at least one explosive dye package in with the money. The other man, the report said, was standing near the door of the bank acting as a lookout. After collecting the money and hastily stuffing it into their jacket pockets, the two men left the bank and headed west. Livonia Police responding to the robbery alarm watched two men fitting the description of the culprits running toward the nearby Franklin Square Apartments and get into a white Ford Escort station wagon in the parking lot. The officers followed the car as it headed north on Middlebelt. When the officers activated the cruiser’s lights, the driver of the Escort sped up to 80 mph and eventually turned east on Seven Mile. The report said the chase extended into Redford where township officers laid down spike strips in the eastbound lanes of Seven Mile east of Beech Daly. The driver swerved to avoid the strips, but lost control of the vehicle and crashed into a tree. Damage to the car and injuries to the driver and the passenger were so extensive that Redford Township firefighters had to be called to the scene to remove them from the car. The two men were transported to nearby Botsford Hospital in Farmington Hills. Police reported a pistol was found in the wrecked vehicle. Back in Livonia, people living in the Franklin Square Apartments contacted police to report finding wads of cash that were covered in red dye. Livonia Police Lt. Greg Winn said that cash is returned to the U.S. Treasury where it will be identified and new currency will be issued to the bank. The suspects each have previous convictions for armed robbery, among others.
Dash Cam and Phone Mounted in Car
A dash cam and phone is mounted securely on the inside of a vehicle.
Officer Dragged (2006)
Officer Brenda Bermudez of the Austin Police Department Initiated a stop of a Green Subaru Station Wagon driven by Twenty-four-year old Armando Torres for speeding. Also, after talking with Torres, he indicated that he knew the officer and Bermudez remembered an alteration a year prior where she had struggled with Torres during an arrest and Torres and pushed her and shoved her into a Glass Window at a 7-11 Store. Bermudez also realized from an earlier APB that the vehicle was stolen and that Torres was possibly intoxicated after noticing glassy eyes.... After Calling for Backup, and realizing that Torres had prior aggression with her Officer Bermudez waited for the backup to initiate an arrest but before backup could arrive Officer Bermudez reached into the vehicle because she thought Torrez was reaching for a weapon. Then Torrez engaged the vehicle to flee... Officer Bermudez was dragged nearly 15 feet before pushing out of the vehicle and then run over by the rear tire. Although seriously injured Officer Bermudez has recovered and is still an active police officer with APD. Armando Torres was arrested a short distance away at a Popeys restaurant and sentenced to 20 years in prison for aggravated assault on a police officer.
Timelapse taxi POV passing along busy street, Bali
Seminyak is a popular tourist destination. Lots of hotels, resorts, villas and shopping are available just beyond the sands.
Time Lapse Lockdown Shot Of Black Hat And Blue Papers Over Car Wash Landscape Against Sky On Sunny Day - Albuquerque, New Mexico
Time lapse lockdown shot of black hat and blue papers over car wash landscape against sky on sunny day - Exploring Albuquerque
Dog Shooting on tape 2003
At 4:52 in the afternoon of January First Tennessee Highway Patrol in Nashville received a call from a woman in Wilson County who was traveling east on Interstate 40, and who reported she had been passed by a green station wagon traveling at a high rate of speed, and that a large amount of money had been thrown out of the window. A "BOLO" (Be On the Lookout) call was put out to all cars to this effect. * At 5:00, Operator Shannon Pickard sent a teletype from Nashville Dispatch to all Middle Tennessee agencies inquiring as to whether there had been any robberies where a large sum of money might have been taken, involving a dark green station wagon bearing out-of-state tags. At 5:07, Trooper David Bush called in to say he had met a car matching the vehicle description, and was trying to catch up with it. Operator McHood broadcast to all vehicles that Trooper Bush is trying to catch a dark green station wagon, possibly involved in a recent robbery involving large amounts of cash, and asked if there was a unit in the area to assist him. Trooper Jeff Phann responded. After Pulling over an Innocent Family after the father had left his wallet on the roof of the car at a rest stop the family dog is shot dead when one officer overreacts to the dog's obvious non-threatening gestures. #################################### January 8, 2003 Tennessee Highway Patrol Col. Mark Fagan will decide what punishments, if any, will be meted out to employees involved in the Jan. 1 shooting of a dog on Interstate 40 in Cookeville, officials said. Fagan will also determine whether any policy changes need to implemented in the wake of the shooting, which was triggered by a phone call from a woman who reported seeing "a large amount of money" being thrown out of a station wagon in Wilson County, according to Tennessee Department of Safety spokeswoman Beth Womack. "The colonel's office is now looking at what, if any, policies or procedures may have been violated and what, if any, disciplinary action is appropriate," Womack said Thursday. Although investigators have pored over all the audio and videotaped information made during the course of the traffic stop and shooting, Womack indicated that at least some conversations weren't recorded. "It was found that some of the communication between dispatchers was made on a Nextel-type two-way instead of a recorded telephone or radio line, therefore cannot be absolutely confirmed," Womack said. Troopers thought the station wagon might have been involved in an armed robbery when they pulled it about 5:15 p.m., authorities said. It turned out that the driver of the station wagon, James Smoak, had left his wallet on the car when he stopped to get gas while he and his family were driving from Nashville to their home near Asheville. Dispatchers informed troopers and Cookeville police that the car might have been involved in a "recent robbery," and the officers conducted a felony stop with guns drawn. Smoak, his wife, Pamela Smoak, and their 17-year-old son, Brandon Hayden, were ordered from the car and handcuffed. They repeatedly told the officers that two dogs, including a mixed pit bull named Patton, were in the car and asked the officers to close the door, according to a videotape of the incident shot from a THP cruiser. Moments later, Patton bounded out of the vehicle and trotted toward Cookeville officer Eric Hall, its tail wagging. Hall backed up quickly as the dog kept coming toward him, then shot and killed the animal with his shotgun. In a written incident report filed after the shooting, Hall said he asked a dispatcher "what felony had been committed" as he drove to assist troopers but the dispatcher "was not able to give me the information before I arrived on the scene." Hall said it appeared that the dog "singled me out from the other officers and charged toward me, growling (sic) in an aggressive manner. I yelled at the dog to "Get Back" but it attempted to circle me to attack, so I felt I had no other option but to protect myself. I fired once at the dog instantly putting it down." "When asked during our investigation why the passenger door was not closed, Lieutenant (Jerry) Andrews indicated that if he or another officer had moved to that side of the car, he would have been in the line of any potential crossfire," Womack said in a press release. "Remember - at this time, the troopers on the scene were still under the impression that a felony may have been committed, and were acting accordingly." Cookeville police officials declined to return phone calls seeking comment, although Tennessee Department of Safety spokeswoman Beth Womack said Hall had been assigned to administrative duties. After the shooting, James Smoak tried to stand up but was wrestled to the ground by troopers. After he was placed in the back of a patrol car, he repeatedly asked the officers to get a veterinarian but his requests were ignored. "You all have gone crazy," he said. Later, after the officers determined that the family had committed no crime, the officers gave Smoak a plastic bag to collect the corpse of his dog after he told them to leave his former pet alone. "You've done enough," he said. After the officers removed the handcuffs from Pamela Smoak, she sunk to the ground by the family's car and cried. "I'm never stepping foot in this state again," she said. Womack said THP's investigation concluded the troopers were justified in conducting a felony stop based on the information they were given by dispatchers. "It's an unusual situation seeing a car go by with money flying out of it," she said. Somehow, as the dispatchers tried to find out information about the car and sent out a teletype request for data on recent robberies in the area, the call went from "being an inquiry as to whether a robbery had occurred to whether the dark green station wagon had been involved (in a robbery)." When asked if the state had offered to compensate the family for the loss of their pet, Womack said: "Not at this time, no." In a written complaint against the officers, Pamela Smoak lashed out at the handling of the initial phone call. "No one ever called in a robbery or any felony!" Smoak wrote. "A felony stop should not have been made. A murder has been committed by the Tennessee Highway Patrol. ... There was a very bad error on someone's part and we paid for it." J.J. Stambaugh may be reached at 865-342-6307 Tennessee Department of Safety THP STATEMENT ON SMOAK FAMILY INCIDENT Nashville (January 8, 2003) -- We at the Tennessee Department of Safety and The Tennessee Highway Patrol would like to convey our deepest sympathy, to the Smoak family, for the events of January 1st in Cookeville, Tennessee. Losing a beloved family pet is difficult at any time, but especially under such circumstances as the ones last week. The Tennessee Department of Safety and the Cookeville Police Department have spent the past several days closely scrutinizing what happened that night, talking to the parties who were involved, going over statements, radio transmissions, and videotape, in an intense investigation of the New Year's Day event. Any questions relating specifically to the shooting of the dog, Patton, must be addressed to the Cookeville Police Department. But while it was not one of our Troopers who fired the fatal shot, the Cookeville officers were assisting us in this traffic stop. Those involved in our investigation included Department of Safety Commissioner Jerry W. Scott, Internal Affairs Director Gerald Allen, Tennessee Highway Patrol Commander Colonel Mark Fagan, Captain Randy Hoover of the Cookeville District of the Tennessee Highway Patrol, Captain Danny Wilson of the Nashville THP District, as well as members of our Criminal Investigation Division, training staff, administrative staff, and legal division. Our investigation has found that our troopers on the scene that night - Trooper David Bush, Trooper Jeff Phann, and Lieutenant Jerry Andrews - did have probable cause to conduct what in police terms is called a "felony stop" of a motorist. However, some issues were found in the chain of events that led to it being given that status.
Driving car on off road
Driving car on off road with Full HD Video.
Static shot from the porch of a Suburban house POV looking towards the street with other houses and cars parked on street.
Static shot from the porch of a Suburban house POV looking towards the street with other houses and cars parked on street. To obtain a clean version of this video, please contact your Getty representative.
Drive around the city. Side View
Drive around the city. Side View
Close shot from inside a police car looking out of driver's window to a pawn shop in the background.
Close shot from inside a police car looking out of driver's window to a pawn shop in the background. To obtain a clean version of this video, please contact your Getty representative.
Man sitting in Van after installing a new mirror
Man sitting in Van after installing a new mirror