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Video: Ga. cop dragged by fleeing suspect’s car

SAVANNAH, Ga. — An officer’s body camera captured the moment he was violently dragged by a suspect fleeing in a vehicle.

According to WBTW, the officer was in the area on a shoplifting call Saturday when he recognized a possible suspect in another unsolved crime.

As the officer approached the suspect, 23-year-old Brandon Christopher Adams, the suspect was instructed to take his keys out of the ignition.

Adams refused the officer’s command multiple times. As the officer moved to pull the keys out of the ignition, Adams sped off – bringing the officer with him as he fled.

The officer was tossed from the vehicle and purposely rolled away in order to avoid getting run over by the wheels.

According to WSAV, Adams turned himself in Thursday in connection to the incident and is charged with aggravated assault of a police officer and felony obstruction of an officer.

The officer survived the incident without serious injuries, according to the report.

Mo. deputy gives escaped monkey a lift home

By Brian Burnes
The Kansas City Star

LIVINGSTON COUNTY. Mo. — A capuchin monkey that fled his owner’s home and spent several days in the northwest Missouri wild had had enough by Tuesday.

When Livingston County Sheriff’s Deputy Chris Mueller called him by name — Harley — the 6-year-old monkey jumped right in his truck.

“I had been worried sick about him,” said Mueller, a friend of the monkey’s owner.

The friend, who owns several monkeys, reported Harley missing over the weekend. Harley had bolted from his home through a briefly opened door.

On Tuesday, a caller told the sheriff’s office he thought he had seen the monkey on a county road northwest of Chillicothe, the county seat.
Mueller drove out, saw Harley and stopped his truck.

“I started talking to him by name,” Mueller said. “Then I just opened the door to my truck and asked if he wanted to go for a ride and he came right in.”

It’s possible that Harley recognized Mueller, who had held him several times in the past.

“More than anything, I think he was just really hungry,” Mueller said. “He tried to eat everything on my floor mats.”

Harley and his fellow monkeys all are registered, as required by state exotic animal laws, Mueller said.

Copyright 2015 The Kansas City Star

McClatchy-Tribune News Service