An 18 year old from Washington D.C. fled from a traffic stop
on Summerland Key Thursday night; he was finally stopped in Marathon when
deputies used Stinger Spikes to puncture the tires on his vehicle.
Just before 10 p.m. Sheriff’s dispatchers received
information a blue Ford Mustang was driving recklessly at a high rate of speed
northbound from the 17 mile marker of the Highway. Deputy John Gabay spotted
the car as it passed the 25 mile marker at 73 miles per hour in a 45 mile per
hour zone.
Deputy Gabay pulled the car over and asked to see the driver’s
license, registration and insurance. He could see two people in the vehicle. The
driver, later identified as Leonidas Williams, could not produce any of the
information the deputy asked him for. He asked the deputy if he could look up
his driver’s license information using a date of birth and social security
number.
Deputy Gabay ran the vehicle’s registration and the date of
birth and social security number the driver gave him. All the information returned
as belonging to a white male from Massachusetts with the first name of “Jack”.
When Deputy Gabay asked the driver if he was “Jack” the driver said yes. The driver
was a young black male.
When Deputy Gabay confronted Williams with the fact that he
knew he was lying about his identity, Williams took off, speeding northbound.
Deputy Gabay called out the vehicle description over his police radio asking
deputies to be on the lookout for it.
Deputy Gabay and Sgt. Evan Calhoun continued northbound
looking for the vehicle. They spotted it several times, first northbound, then
it did a U-turn and went south, then northbound again.
Marathon deputies got a set of Stinger Spikes ready to stop
the vehicle. As the vehicle approached the north end of the Seven Mile Bridge,
they deployed the spikes which punctured the car’s tires. It came to a rest up
against a fence on Knight’s Key. Williams fled on foot from the car, but he was
found after three hours of searching when he finally gave himself up to
deputies at 1:30 a.m.
Subsequent
investigation revealed the passenger, who told deputies he was in fear for his
life, demanded to be let out of the car on Big Pine Key. He was located on Big
Pine Key and said he’d only known the driver for about a week and that they met
in Miami. He was not arrested.
Williams was arrested. A check on his name revealed he has
no license and has outstanding warrants in Maryland. He was charged with giving
a false name to a law enforcement officer, driving without a license, two
counts of fleeing and eluding police, two counts of reckless driving as well as
multiple traffic infractions including passing in a no passing zone, speeding,
and resisting arrest.
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