A North Carolina man who allegedly joined a police chase and later
handcuffed the suspect at gunpoint was eventually arrested for
impersonating a police officer.
On the night of October 5, police in Wilson, North Carolina, got some
unexpected help during a high-speed car chase. At about 11 pm, they
stopped a car in search of a murder suspect, but as they approached the
vehicle, the driver sped off. The officers got in their patrol car and
pursued the suspect’s car, but about 2 miles into the car chase,
something really strange happened. A black Ford Taurus with blue lights
turned on sped past the patrol car, got in front of the suspect’s car,
and slowed down, forcing the car behind to stop.
Pinned between the Ford Taurus and and the patrol car, the suspect
had no choice but to stop. However, before the police could make sense
of what was going on, the man in the Taurus, later identified as
30-year-old David Adams, got out of his car, pointed a gun at the five
men in the suspicious vehicle he had stopped, commanded them to get out,
and then handcuffed and searched the driver.
It’s not clear exactly what the policemen in the patrol car were
doing while all this was going on, but apparently at one point they
became unsure that Adams was a police officer himself and asked him to
stop what he was doing. However, he reportedly left the scene before
they had a chance to talk to him.
Police later ran a check on David Adams and learned that he was not a
“sworn law enforcement officer”. Last Wednesday, Adams was served with a
warrant for his arrest and charged with impersonating a law enforcement
officer. He was given a $1,500 unsecured bond.
It turns out
that one of the five men in the car Adams stops was the brother of the
murder suspect they were searching for, and technically the fake cop did
help them, so it will be interesting to see how the judge rules at his
trial.