Florida Deputy on Traffic Stop Nearly Struck By Speeding Car

Dramatic video shows a woman driving at night at a high speed nearly striking an officer who was conducting a traffic stop along a Florida road.

Bodycam footage taken by Deputy Charles Williams shows a white Mercedes sedan passed within inches of him, sideswiping his patrol vehicle as it was stopped in Lutz, 15 miles north of Tampa.

On the evening of May 4, Williams called his superiors to report, "I just had a white Mercedes hit my vehicle," before starting a high-speed chase of the car and its hit-and-run driver on Dale Mabry Highway.

Florida woman nearly hits deputy
Deputy Charles Williams talks to a driver who almost hit him on May 4, 2022, in Hillsborough County, Florida. Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office/Zenger

Fearing for his own safety and for that of other motorists, Williams activated his siren and flashing lights; however, the driver continued to elude him.

When the car finally stopped, Williams confronted the driver, telling the woman behind the wheel to "get out."

The video obscured the woman's face as she descended from the Mercedes, pleading for forgiveness and saying "I'm sorry."

Once the driver was standing in front of Williams, the deputy said: "You realize you hit my truck, right?"

Apologizing again, the driver said, "I'm so sorry."

"Yeah, you hit it and kept on going," Williams told her.

The woman claimed she "didn't know I hit it."

Apparently expressing disbelief that she had not registered the glancing collision and the sound it made, Williams asked: "You didn't hear a loud boom?"

Williams explained to her how she could have killed him. "I was standing in the road and you almost hit me."

"I thought I hit a rock or something," the woman claimed: "I heard a clunk." Then she tried to touch Williams and he told her not to touch him.

"You almost hit me and then hit my truck. And then you keep going. And I'm behind you with my lights on and you continue to go," Williams said.

Another officer enters the frame as Williams asks the woman why she would drive in the lane after seeing the stopped police vehicle with its lights flashing.

"You didn't think to move over? I'm literally blocking the lane," Williams said.

Florida has a state law that requires drivers to move over if they're approaching a stopped emergency vehicle or tow truck, and if they are unable to move over, slow to 20 mph less than the posted speed.

The video of the incident shared by the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office ended with Sheriff Chad Chronister telling citizens: "Don't put our deputies or any first responder at risk," and added, "When you see flashing lights, change lanes."

"If you can't safely move over, then slow down or proceed with caution," he said.

This story was provided to Newsweek by Zenger News.

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