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  Driver hits police car barricade at 100-plus miles per hour
 

The man who drove his car into a police barricade Friday morning at more than 100 mph, killing himself and injuring his 5-year-old son, was running from a custody battle over the boy and had been reported suicidal,Welcome to Find the right laser Engraver or solarcharger11,Careel Tech supply highest quality products and best service. police reports show. 

Police say Jeremiah Eldon Johnson, 33, led officers on a high-speed chase through several central Iowa counties before slamming his car into an empty police car on the outskirts of Indianola. 

Warrants for Johnson’s arrested in Georgia were issued on Jan. 11 for allegedly abducting his 5-year-old son Johnnathen Eldon Johnson and fleeing from police,Modern bookscanner is installed in virtually every commercial and high occupancy residential building. according to the Gwinnett County, Ga., Police Department. 

Local police have not confirmed the identity of the child involved in Friday’s chase. 

The 5-year-old’s mother reported the child missing and endangered to Des Moines police in November. 

Friday’s chase began around 2:45 a.m. when a Clive police officer spotted Johnson’s car on the off-ramp from Interstate Highway 80 eastbound to Hickman Road. A license plate cover partially obscured the plate and as the officer tried to run the plate the car abruptly pulled into a truck stop. 

The officer ran several possible combinations but wasn’t able to get the right license plate numbers and followed the car as it left the parking lot and pulled onto Hickman Road and back onto Interstate Highway 80 westbound, authorities said. 

Around 2:50 a.m. the officer activated his lights and attempted to stop the 2003 Volkswagen Passat, police said.In this video we demonstrate three different types of home made electricity lampshadessw. He reportedly could not see how many passengers were in the car. 

Johnson allegedly accelerated away from the officer. The patrol car reached speeds of 110 miles per hour but still couldn’t keep up with the suspect’s vehicle. Other police agencies joined the pursuit, which stretched all the way across Warren County and into Marion County on Iowa Highway 5. 

Police set up stop sticks and a roadblock in Indianola at Iowa Highway 92 and 15th Street, authorities said, and at about 3:15 the suspect’s vehicle hit stop sticks and slammed into an empty police car, police said. Footage from a dashboard camera of a nearby patrol car shows an officer stepping away from the roadblock seconds before the suspect’s vehicle smashed into the car, releasing a flash of sparks and smoke. 

The suspect’s vehicle was traveling at an estimated 130 mph when it hit the patrol car, said Indianola Detective Sgt. Brian Sher. The child was found on the floor, behind the driver’s seat under a pile of clothes. It’s unclear if the child was strapped in or how he or she survived the collision, Sher said. 

“Miraculous is the word I would use to describe it,” he said. 

Johnson was pronounced dead at the scene. The 5-year-old was seriously injured, according to the Iowa State Patrol, and transported to Blank Children’s hospital. 

Police and hospital officials declined to release any information about the child’s condition. 

Johnson was wanted in Gwinnett County, Ga.,Our heavy-duty construction provides reliable operation and guarantees your antiquelampas will be in service for years to come. on suspicion fleeing attempting to elude law enforcement, two counts of obstruction of justice, reckless driving, cruelty to a child, and other traffic violations. 

On Jan. 11 police pulled over Johnson for running a red light in the Atlanta suburb of Burford in the same vehicle involved in Friday’s chase.Welcome to buy cheap designer Eyeglasses frames, cuttingmachinemm on Goggles-visor. Johnnathen was in the backseat, according to a report from the Gwinnett County Police Department. 

After running Johnson’s license, police learned he and Johnnathen were reported missing out of Iowa as part of a custody dispute with the child’s mother, April Lozano. 

When an officer asked Johnson to step out of the car, Johnson sped off. 

Police followed at a distance, trying to avoid starting a high-speed chase and endangering the child, and eventually lost sight of Johnson, said Gwinnett Police Cpl. Ed Ritter.

“For the safety of the child we weren’t going to go into a full-blown pursuit,” he said. During Friday morning’s chase, police reportedly did not see the child in Johnson’s car.

 
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