Jennifer Gould
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
The victim convinced a delusional Myers that she needed first aid items to patch herself up.
At 9 p.m., Myers pulled into a Walgreens in Kaiser, Oregon, and watched as his blood-soaked victim walked through the automatic doors.
It was his final mistake.
Store employees saw the carnage, shielded the woman, and called 911 as Myers burned rubber sparking a massive West Coast manhunt.
Salem police warned the public that Myers was armed and dangerous as he fled south through Oregon and into the California heartland.
The 800-mile flight ended in a high-stakes takedown on February 12 when California Highway Patrol intercepted Myers near Bakersfield.
Officers in the Buttonwillow area cornered the Silver Honda Civic and took the fugitive into custody without a shot fired.
Myers now faces charges of attempted second-degree murder and multiple sexual assault felonies.
He is currently awaiting extradition back to Oregon to face the woman who outsmarted him.
And finally, a tourist in Flagler County, Florida, gave flight or fight a whole new meaning when he was caught treating Interstate 95 like a private runway.
Boaz Sinuani was clocked weaving through traffic at a blistering 114 miles per hour in a rented Honda Accord.
When deputies finally grounded the high flyer, Sinuani offered a plain excuse.
He was driving from Miami to New York to catch a flight to Israel.
Listen to the body cam.
You didn't pull over.
You're going to New York?
You're going to be late.
Boas thought he could turn his rental into a rocket ship claiming highways back home have no speed limits.
He quickly realized, though, that when you're racing for a flight, the law has more turbulence.
He was arrested under the super speeder law and hauled to the Sheriff Perry Hall inmate detention facility.