Police: Florida Man Lets 12-Year-Old Drive Jeep 85 Mph

At about midnight on a drizzly Friday night, I received a radio call that a car was spotted with the driver driving erratically. Of course, I’m thinking that I have a drunk driver. A few minutes later, I got another call that the car ran through a wire fence along the road, but was able to get back on the road and continue on.

As soon as I got in back of the car, I hit the siren for a few seconds hoping that the driver would stop, but instead, the driver sped up and we were doing about 70 mph on a back road, wet and the road was fairly straight for about 2 miles. We came to an ‘S’ curve where the driver lost control, went into a skid, hit a ditch as the driver left the road and rolled the car onto it’s roof.

I immediately called for a backup and an ambulance. When I got the person out of the car, I saw that he was about 13 or 14 years old. I thought he was a passenger, so I asked him where was the driver. He said that he was the driver. I later found out that he decided to take his mom’s car for a joyride. His parents had gone out for the evening and he was left alone. He said that he was bored. Luckily, he wasn’t hurt.

I had him transported to the hospital to be checked, but he was OK. I had the car towed to his home. The parents had been home for about a half hour before we got there. Mom and Dad weren’t happy. I told the boy and his parents that I could write him about $700.00 in fines, but just charged him with driving without a license.

During my career, I had a couple cases of underage driving, but this case was my favorite because no one was hurt and I had to admit, the kid was a pretty good driver.
 
135 in a 45 and the driver is 12. Where did she get the balls to drive that fast? Recall the first time you got behind the wheel? You were gripping the steering wheel and scared to go over 20 mph. Anyone want to guess that neither of the two were wearing seat belts?
 
Another candidate for the Darwin Awards, which "salute the improvement of the human genome by honoring those who accidentally remove themselves from it in a spectacular manner."

But he could have removed the kid from it also. I guess these Darwin Award candidates produce collateral damage.
 


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