View allAll Photos Tagged carjack
Being cut off from all supply lines from HQ our (somewhat) fearless explorer carjacks a nearby Strawberry Shortcake doll and procedes with his objective. Exploring this strange world of carbon based life forms and reporting back to HQ is his top priority... right after he swings through the starbucks drive thru.
Have a great Friday people. I'm pretty sure we all made it through so if we hang on for just a few more hours we can relax. Enjoy!
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The first gun we ever owned. First saw it in a gunshow last year. Then really fell in love with it when we saw it in the movie Max Payne.
The Taurus Judge is a five shot revolver designed and produced by Taurus International, chambered for .410 bore shot shells and the .45 Colt cartridge. Taurus promotes the gun as a self defense tool against carjacking and for home protection.
It got its name "The Judge" in 2006 when Bob Morrison, Executive Vice President, learned that judges in high-crime areas of Miami, Florida were purchasing the revolver for personal defense in their courtrooms.
The Fold......King's Norton, Birmingham
The Fold is an area and shopping precinct in Birmingham where it is reported that drug and carjacking gangs rule the streets.
The 2011 Sci-Fi Thriller "In Time" (top) with Justin Timberlake was shot entirely in Los Angeles.
Will and Sylvia (Justin Timberlake and Amanda Seyfried) carjack a limo on this strech of Monterey Road.
We have a title!
This fleeing felon is putting the Wild in the Ride after carjacking a Lamborghini Murcielago from Wild Rides...
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Unum Employee Dies After Hit And Run On Fourth Street
Jeremy Lane Charged
posted December 23, 2009
A Unum employee died hours after she was struck by a hit and run driver on Fourth Street near Unum at 7:11 Wednesday morning.
The victim, Susan Wood, 42, suffered massive internal and head injuries. She underwent surgery at Erlanger Hospital, but later died. Mrs. Wood leaves behind two young children.
Jeremy Lane, 24, of 3117 Olde Town Lane, Chattanooga, was arrested in the case.
Police earlier said they believed the vehicle had been taken in a carjacking a short time earlier this morning. However, police later said Lane made up a story that he had been a carjacking victim. He was charged with filing a false report in that case.
His car, a red Nissan 240 SX, was located, unoccupied, by Chattanooga Police at the River View Grand Apartment complex on Dallas Road.
Lane had initially claimed the vehicle was taken from him in a carjacking at North Market Street and Manning Street.
Mrs. Wood was transported to Erlanger by Hamilton County EMS.
The popular Unum billing representative had been on her way to work when she was struck.
Witnesses said the vehicle that hit her sped up the hill from the direction of Market Street, struck her, then kept on going.
Emergency personnel administered CPR on the victim.
The victim's husband, Matt Wood, is also a Unum employee.
Unum officials advised employees, "In light of this tragic accident, we urge everyone to use extreme caution when crossing the busy streets surrounding our building. Please have a safe holiday season."
ChicagoEye inspired me to take a photo of myself this morning before my shower, something I rarely do. Taking self-portraits, that is. This is pretty much what I look like with my hair grown out after 4 weeks--I've taken a liking to cutting it very short since learning that my skull isn't as conehead-shaped as it feels.
I like the grizzled look not-shaving gives my face. When I'm walking to breakfast and stop at the intersection of 12th and Lamar, women in cars stopped at the intersection lock their doors the moment I make my final approach, fearing I might commit a daytime carjacking. And I'm thinking, "Are you kidding me? In flip-flops?" Years earlier women reacted the same when my hair was long and down my back.
When my beard's longer I look like Gabby Hayes and completely harmless. Avuncular even, which isn't terribly attractive to babes. Neither, for that matter, is 'grizzled'. Or 'harmless'. Babes seem to like 'bad' boys, and my bad boy days are behind me. When all is said and done I'm just a middle-aged eccentric; and being middle aged and eccentric won't get you laid either.
UPDATE: Some women, I've recently learned, actually do go for "middle aged" and "eccentric". I'm totally jazzed that I've found one of them.
The 2011 Sci-Fi Thriller "In Time" with Justin Timberlake was shot entirely in Los Angeles.
Will and Sylvia (Justin Timberlake and Amanda Seyfried) carjack a limo on this strech of Monterey Road.
©AVucha 2018
What began as a hit-and-run investigation Tuesday night in Algonquin, ended in an armed carjacking and police standoff.
Algonquin police responded just before 8:45 p.m. Tuesday to the area of Sunrise Lane in Algonquin as part of a hit-and-run investigation, according to a news release from the Algonquin Police Department.
A car matching the description of one involved in a hit-and-run crash earlier that night was found abandoned in the middle of the road in the area, Algonquin Police Deputy Chief Ryan Markham said.
Police spotted Timothy M. Andrews, 30, of unincorporated Algonquin, walking away from the vehicle nearby, Markham said. The car was reported stolen out of Elgin on Wednesday.
When police approached Andrews, he reportedly fled on foot and was followed to the Walgreens at 1301 E. Algonquin Road, Algonquin. Andrews then displayed a knife to officers and ran to the Jewel-Osco parking lot at 1501 E. Algonquin Road, police said.
He unsuccessfully tried to enter one occupied vehicle and broke the window of another. The female driver, an 83 year-old Algonquin resident, safely exited her 2003 Dodge Neon and was not injured in the process.
Once inside the Dodge, Andrews tried to hit two Algonquin officers with the car but missed them. He left the parking lot at a high rate of speed, and police did not try to follow the vehicle. The officers were not injured.
Algonquin Police Deputy Chief Ryan Markham said many factors are considered when police determine if a chase should be continued.
"[Officers] need to take a lot of things into consideration - weather conditions, traffic, time of day," Markham said.
It had begun to snow at the time of Tuesday night's incident.
Just before 9 p.m., a Barrington Hills police officer found the stolen Dodge. Andrews had struck a telephone pole on Haeger's Bend Road, just east of North River Road, near Algonquin.
The 30-year-old refused to cooperate with police and fire officials.
"We knew he was armed. He was in the car and making threats towards the officers," Markham said. "At that point, he was given every opportunity to come out and surrender. He refused to cooperate, [and it] turned into almost a barricaded subject-type incident."
Algonquin police, Barrington Hills police, McHenry County Sheriff's deputies and members of the Northern Illinois Police Alarm System, a multi-jurisdictional SWAT team, worked to safely coax Andrews from the vehicle.
He surrendered just after 9:50 p.m.
Andrews was charged with aggravated vehicular hijacking, possessing a stolen vehicle and aggravated assault, as a result of the incident.
He was transported to McHenry County jail after being treated at an area hospital for injuries he sustained in the crash.
Markham said carjacking's in the Algonquin area are rare.
"I'm not aware of any other ones that have happened recently," Markham said.
Andrews has a lengthy criminal record, according to online court documents. He was sentenced to one year in prison in 2007, in connection with a mob action conviction and three years in 2009, in connection with a burglary conviction.
Andrews was conditionally discharged in 2011 after being convicted of disorderly conduct. In 2012, he was sentenced to three more years in prison for possessing a stolen vehicle.
Andrews was sentenced to four years in prison in 2015 for domestic battery.
If convicted of the most serious charge, Andrews faces six to 30 years in prison. He's due to appear in court Thursday morning.
*Written by Lindsay Gloor, Northwest Herald.
This photograph is being made available only for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial material, advertisements, emails, products, promotions without the expressed consent of Alex Vucha.
The first gun we ever owned. First saw it in a gunshow last year. Then really fell in love with it when we saw it in the movie Max Payne.
The Taurus Judge is a five shot revolver designed and produced by Taurus International, chambered for .410 bore shot shells and the .45 Colt cartridge. Taurus promotes the gun as a self defense tool against carjacking and for home protection.
It got its name "The Judge" in 2006 when Bob Morrison, Executive Vice President, learned that judges in high-crime areas of Miami, Florida were purchasing the revolver for personal defense in their courtrooms.
An unknown suspect pretended to have a weapon and stole a pick-up truck from a man getting gas at a Palo Alto service station on Sunday, tearing off the gas nozzle and hose as he sped away. The victim was not injured and the suspect and vehicle remain at large.
On Sunday, July 9, 2017, at about 11:55 a.m., our 24-hour dispatch center received a call of a carjacking that had just occurred at the Shell Station at 1161 Embarcadero Road. Officers responded immediately but could not locate the suspect or the stolen vehicle.
The investigation revealed that at about 11:50 a.m., an unknown suspect walked up to the victim, a man in his forties, who pumping gas into his black 2012 Dodge Ram pick-up, California license plate 84634F1. The suspect yelled, “Give me the car!” while holding his right hand behind his back, as though he was armed with a weapon of some sort. The victim backed away from the suspect, who then hopped into the driver’s seat and drove away westbound on Embarcadero Road, tearing the gas nozzle and hose off. Officers recovered the gas nozzle and hose on Embarcadero Road at Middlefield Road.
The victim described the suspect as a “chubby” Hispanic male in his twenties, wearing a plain dark-colored T-shirt and dark jeans. The victim met with a police artist and produced the attached sketch. The victim also provided police with the attached photograph of his truck, which has a white and blue removable magnetic door seal on the passenger side door. As of the date and time of this news release, the truck has not been found.
Detectives are actively working on this case. There have been no other carjackings recently in Palo Alto.
Anyone with information about this incident is asked to call our 24-hour dispatch center at 650-329-2413. Anonymous tips can be e-mailed to paloalto@tipnow.org or sent via text message or voice mail to 650-383-8984. Tips can also be submitted anonymously through our free mobile app, downloadable at www.bit.ly/PAPD-AppStore or www.bit.ly/PAPD-GooglePlay.
With alarming trends in shootings, robbery, homicide, gun crime and carjackings... it's rarely a dull day in the City of Brotherly Love.
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On 4 June 2017, the body of the late UNAMID peacekeeper, who was killed by unidentified armed gunmen in a carjacking incident in Nyala, South Darfur last week, is transported to Nyala airport enroute to Nigeria. In the picture, Nigerian Peacekeepers and other Mission staff pay their last respects to the fallen peacekeeper at a ceremony held at the UNAMID Pakistan Level III Hospital, Sector South Headquarters, in Nyala. Photo by Mubarak Bako, UNAMID.
©AVucha 2018
What began as a hit-and-run investigation Tuesday night in Algonquin, ended in an armed carjacking and police standoff.
Algonquin police responded just before 8:45 p.m. Tuesday to the area of Sunrise Lane in Algonquin as part of a hit-and-run investigation, according to a news release from the Algonquin Police Department.
A car matching the description of one involved in a hit-and-run crash earlier that night was found abandoned in the middle of the road in the area, Algonquin Police Deputy Chief Ryan Markham said.
Police spotted Timothy M. Andrews, 30, of unincorporated Algonquin, walking away from the vehicle nearby, Markham said. The car was reported stolen out of Elgin on Wednesday.
When police approached Andrews, he reportedly fled on foot and was followed to the Walgreens at 1301 E. Algonquin Road, Algonquin. Andrews then displayed a knife to officers and ran to the Jewel-Osco parking lot at 1501 E. Algonquin Road, police said.
He unsuccessfully tried to enter one occupied vehicle and broke the window of another. The female driver, an 83 year-old Algonquin resident, safely exited her 2003 Dodge Neon and was not injured in the process.
Once inside the Dodge, Andrews tried to hit two Algonquin officers with the car but missed them. He left the parking lot at a high rate of speed, and police did not try to follow the vehicle. The officers were not injured.
Algonquin Police Deputy Chief Ryan Markham said many factors are considered when police determine if a chase should be continued.
"[Officers] need to take a lot of things into consideration - weather conditions, traffic, time of day," Markham said.
It had begun to snow at the time of Tuesday night's incident.
Just before 9 p.m., a Barrington Hills police officer found the stolen Dodge. Andrews had struck a telephone pole on Haeger's Bend Road, just east of North River Road, near Algonquin.
The 30-year-old refused to cooperate with police and fire officials.
"We knew he was armed. He was in the car and making threats towards the officers," Markham said. "At that point, he was given every opportunity to come out and surrender. He refused to cooperate, [and it] turned into almost a barricaded subject-type incident."
Algonquin police, Barrington Hills police, McHenry County Sheriff's deputies and members of the Northern Illinois Police Alarm System, a multi-jurisdictional SWAT team, worked to safely coax Andrews from the vehicle.
He surrendered just after 9:50 p.m.
Andrews was charged with aggravated vehicular hijacking, possessing a stolen vehicle and aggravated assault, as a result of the incident.
He was transported to McHenry County jail after being treated at an area hospital for injuries he sustained in the crash.
Markham said carjacking's in the Algonquin area are rare.
"I'm not aware of any other ones that have happened recently," Markham said.
Andrews has a lengthy criminal record, according to online court documents. He was sentenced to one year in prison in 2007, in connection with a mob action conviction and three years in 2009, in connection with a burglary conviction.
Andrews was conditionally discharged in 2011 after being convicted of disorderly conduct. In 2012, he was sentenced to three more years in prison for possessing a stolen vehicle.
Andrews was sentenced to four years in prison in 2015 for domestic battery.
If convicted of the most serious charge, Andrews faces six to 30 years in prison. He's due to appear in court Thursday morning.
*Written by Lindsay Gloor, Northwest Herald.
This photograph is being made available only for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial material, advertisements, emails, products, promotions without the expressed consent of Alex Vucha.
Claude Dubois was a very famous race driver back then. He was not a very rich man, so he thought becoming a race driver would allow him to drive and race expensive cars at least. Starting in 1955 he was actively racing until 1967. He piloted amongst many other cars a D-type Jaguar, a Lister-Jaguar, Porsche 550RS and some Ferraris. He won his first race in Spa/Belgium on his own Triumph TR-2. After this race he was nominated into the Belgium national race team. In 1964 he drove a Sunbeam in the LeMans factory team. In 1966 Claude intended to start with a Ford GT, but was kindly advised that there was no place for him - from Ford.
He simply entered a Ferrari GTB. This was a kind of provocation to FORD, as a Ford and Shelby dealer should not sit in a Ferrari. Then through a special deal and Top management intervention, he got a Shelby R-model SFM 5R539, which he entered in the Le Mans race. Unfortunately it did not finish due to the well-known transmission neck cracking problem and subsequent oil leak..
Monsieur Dubois was in fact not really a Ford dealer, but he sold them. Other cars were FRUA 428 and De Tomaso Mangusta and Pantera. Some of the Panteras and all Shelby Europa carry a tag of Claude Dubois for identification, which was necessary for homologation.
But sales were really decreasing by 1970, so Claude quit business in 1972.
More info about Claude Dubois : www.ponysite.de/sheleur.htm
Police and Dignitary Departure immediately following the Police Officer BRENNAN RABAIN Funeral Services at Victory Christian Ministries at 3911 Saint Barnabas Road in Temple Hills, Maryland on Thursday morning, 12 March 2015 by Elvert Barnes Photography
Learn more about PO BRENNAN RABAIN FUNERAL SERVICES at pgpolice.blogspot.com/2015/03/funeral-arrangements-for-po...
Elvert Barnes March 2015 PGPD Officer BRENNAN RABAIN FUNERAL docu-project at elvertbarnes.com/BRFuneral
Published at dcist.com/story/20/09/25/md-prince-georges-county-familie...
Published at dcist.com/story/21/02/24/report-alleging-discrimination-p...
Published at dcist.com/story/21/03/12/md-prince-georges-police-budget-...
Published at dcist.com/story/22/09/05/prince-georges-county-curfew-cri...
Published at dcist.com/story/22/10/11/prince-georges-county-extends-ju...
Published at dcist.com/story/23/02/27/prince-georges-county-police-off...
One of the bison from the herd at Parc Omega, near Montebello Quebec. He's in the midst of shedding his winter coat. The way he was rolling around trying to get rid of the old fur, the moulting must be really itchy.
Hey! I just noticed that I might have caught a carjacking in the background of this shot. Two deer/elk holding up that car. One standing in front to stop it, and the second going to the window to get some bounty (carrots).
1. Sun dancers, 2. Some red for bokeh wednesday..., 3. And when it rains on your parade, look up rather than down. Without the rain, there would be no rainbow., 4. Au revoir!, 5. Still life with quince, 6. Simple, 7. Kilchurn Castle, Scotland, 8. *SUGAR IN THE MORNING..., 9. Morning Dream, 10. Relaxing colors, 11. Pretty Pink Petit Fours for Valentine Day, 12. Untitled, 13. Old peach orchard, 14. muscari, 15. under a sweet sky, 16. Binder Twine, 17. Fall is upon us, 18. Carjack, 19. Unusual beach perspective, 20. Natural blonde, 21. bench monday ~ autumn's in the air, 22. Pink is in the air, 23. Untitled, 24. Maple Leaves in September, 25. People can be so cold. They'll hurt you and desert you. Well they'll take your soul if you let them. Oh yeah, but don't you let them., 26. Rainy Evening, 27. wild valley, 28. Blue Monday, 29. Santa Luce Sunset, 30. PAPALLONA DE L'ARBOÇ - Mariposa del madroño - Charaxes jasius - Two Tailed Pasha, 31. Venice in the morning, 32. Inside, 33. Light At The End, 34. 254/365 : A is for Alphabet, 35. Molt bon dia, tristesa / Good morning, sadness, 36. Untitled
Honor Guard at the Sergeant Joe Bergeron memorial ceremony. Sergeant Bergeron was shot and killed while attempting to question two suspects in a carjacking. Rest in Peace, Joe.
Every year at Mount Hagen, in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea, the biggest reunion of tribes in the world takes place. In a region where the first white man was seen in 1930, traditions are still strong, and the pride of the tribes takes precedence over modernity. Created in 1964 by Australian colonials to pacify the tribes, there's still a possibility of a confrontation, but these days take place in the shape of singing, colours and incredible garments...
“Armed carjackings, assaults, robbery, shootings and serious sexual offences, including rape, are common in Papua” warns the Foreign Office travel advice to travelers! But once you are in the place, you can meet the most incredible tribes in the world. The “Men bilong pait” (the Warriors) ,the” pipels” (the women), and the “pikinini” (the children) are all celebrating. Hundreds of papus are gathering themselves for the Singsing. It’s in open air, but you feel like being backstage in the latest fashion show in Milano or Paris as men paint their faces in red,yellow,white,black, women take grass to make skirts or kilts and cover their bodies with clay, mud, or even pigs fat! Old wise men are building the giant headdresses made of eagle, parrot and bird of paradise feathers. Each feather is packed in newspaper, to protect them from insects. It takes hours… Some warriors wear also marsupial jaws as necklaces! “If you do not have jaws, you can put dogs teeth, it works too” they told me!
Papua New Guinea , Highlands, Mount Hagen festival singsing
© Eric Lafforgue
Blow Torch ... Arnott's Biscuit Tin ... Shoe Lasp ... Shell Oil Can ... Car Jack
Some of the old stuff in the old shed...
Every year at Mount Hagen, in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea, the biggest reunion of tribes in the world takes place. In a region where the first white man was seen in 1930, traditions are still strong, and the pride of the tribes takes precedence over modernity. Created in 1964 by Australian colonials to pacify the tribes, there's still a possibility of a confrontation, but these days take place in the shape of singing, colours and incredible garments...
“Armed carjackings, assaults, robbery, shootings and serious sexual offences, including rape, are common in Papua” warns the Foreign Office travel advice to travelers! But once you are in the place, you can meet the most incredible tribes in the world. The “Men bilong pait” (the Warriors) ,the” pipels” (the women), and the “pikinini” (the children) are all celebrating. Hundreds of papus are gathering themselves for the Singsing. It’s in open air, but you feel like being backstage in the latest fashion show in Milano or Paris as men paint their faces in red,yellow,white,black, women take grass to make skirts or kilts and cover their bodies with clay, mud, or even pigs fat! Old wise men are building the giant headdresses made of eagle, parrot and bird of paradise feathers. Each feather is packed in newspaper, to protect them from insects. It takes hours… Some warriors wear also marsupial jaws as necklaces! “If you do not have jaws, you can put dogs teeth, it works too” they told me!
Papua New Guinea , Highlands, Mount Hagen festival singsing
© Eric Lafforgue
Inconveniently, while planning for a side trip from South Africa to Livingstone and Victoria Falls in Zambia, flights from Nelspruit to Livingtone had been suspended. The long, tedious and perilous road trip back to Joh'burg was both the next best and worst of options.
Nelspruit, now renamed Mbombela, should have been a 2½ hour drive away from Pungwe. Instead there was a 6½ hour white knuckle terror transit from the safety of lion and leopard infested Pungwe to a razor wire surrounded hotel compound in Johannesburg. The camouflaged, beret wearing, sub-machine gun armed gatekeepers are not welcoming. Once inside, the "Leave your guns in the lockers provided" sign adds little to suggest peaceful ambience. You'd be safer with the lions. At least the restaurant staff had more balanced attitudes. Perhaps supposing that I was a white oppressor they went about their service with a chip on each shoulder. They were losing my sympathy.
Departing for Zambia was stepping out of a horrid mess into the unknown. What if it was worse than South Africa? It wasn't! Livingstone is one of those lovely little single level frontier airports where you know you are just a few steps away from adventure. The 50USD bribe visa fee was a painless gift to a country I would happily have given more.
Livingstone's streets were dry and dusty, but humming. Unlike in South Africa, the risk here didn't seem to come from muggings, murders, mayhem, carjackings or collisions. The depth of the rustic gutters on the roadside where you might sprain an ankle and the prevalence of malaria in its mosquitoes seemed much more likely problems. Circling over the town to land took the plane over the Zambezi River and Victoria Falls. Wow! OK, that's done so, box ticked, what now?
The hotel welcome was amazing. They must know that nobody arrives here fresh and free of dust. The wash basin and towels are welcome as are the refreshments. There's the Zambezi, just there, and every room has a view. Unlike in Johannesburg, your blood pressure just falls away. You relax.
Don't relax too much! Despite the safety of the hotel, this sign outside your balcony is a reminder of just where you've landed. Welcome to the Zambezi!
Even if it is relatively flat, shit can happen. Opposite tire slid causing the jack to fail. Landed on a boat seat spacer on the bumper That I was going to try as a stand. The stand was near the rear axel. Weight of car on bumper. Surprised it did damage anything.
Gloria Macarenko broadcasting CBC News Vancouver at 5 live in the studio on New Year's Eve above the boarded up windows where a carjacked BMW reversed into the building earlier in the week.
Follow me on Twitter @susangittins
©AVucha 2018
What began as a hit-and-run investigation Tuesday night in Algonquin, ended in an armed carjacking and police standoff.
Algonquin police responded just before 8:45 p.m. Tuesday to the area of Sunrise Lane in Algonquin as part of a hit-and-run investigation, according to a news release from the Algonquin Police Department.
A car matching the description of one involved in a hit-and-run crash earlier that night was found abandoned in the middle of the road in the area, Algonquin Police Deputy Chief Ryan Markham said.
Police spotted Timothy M. Andrews, 30, of unincorporated Algonquin, walking away from the vehicle nearby, Markham said. The car was reported stolen out of Elgin on Wednesday.
When police approached Andrews, he reportedly fled on foot and was followed to the Walgreens at 1301 E. Algonquin Road, Algonquin. Andrews then displayed a knife to officers and ran to the Jewel-Osco parking lot at 1501 E. Algonquin Road, police said.
He unsuccessfully tried to enter one occupied vehicle and broke the window of another. The female driver, an 83 year-old Algonquin resident, safely exited her 2003 Dodge Neon and was not injured in the process.
Once inside the Dodge, Andrews tried to hit two Algonquin officers with the car but missed them. He left the parking lot at a high rate of speed, and police did not try to follow the vehicle. The officers were not injured.
Algonquin Police Deputy Chief Ryan Markham said many factors are considered when police determine if a chase should be continued.
"[Officers] need to take a lot of things into consideration - weather conditions, traffic, time of day," Markham said.
It had begun to snow at the time of Tuesday night's incident.
Just before 9 p.m., a Barrington Hills police officer found the stolen Dodge. Andrews had struck a telephone pole on Haeger's Bend Road, just east of North River Road, near Algonquin.
The 30-year-old refused to cooperate with police and fire officials.
"We knew he was armed. He was in the car and making threats towards the officers," Markham said. "At that point, he was given every opportunity to come out and surrender. He refused to cooperate, [and it] turned into almost a barricaded subject-type incident."
Algonquin police, Barrington Hills police, McHenry County Sheriff's deputies and members of the Northern Illinois Police Alarm System, a multi-jurisdictional SWAT team, worked to safely coax Andrews from the vehicle.
He surrendered just after 9:50 p.m.
Andrews was charged with aggravated vehicular hijacking, possessing a stolen vehicle and aggravated assault, as a result of the incident.
He was transported to McHenry County jail after being treated at an area hospital for injuries he sustained in the crash.
Markham said carjacking's in the Algonquin area are rare.
"I'm not aware of any other ones that have happened recently," Markham said.
Andrews has a lengthy criminal record, according to online court documents. He was sentenced to one year in prison in 2007, in connection with a mob action conviction and three years in 2009, in connection with a burglary conviction.
Andrews was conditionally discharged in 2011 after being convicted of disorderly conduct. In 2012, he was sentenced to three more years in prison for possessing a stolen vehicle.
Andrews was sentenced to four years in prison in 2015 for domestic battery.
If convicted of the most serious charge, Andrews faces six to 30 years in prison. He's due to appear in court Thursday morning.
*Written by Lindsay Gloor, Northwest Herald.
This photograph is being made available only for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial material, advertisements, emails, products, promotions without the expressed consent of Alex Vucha.
Motorcycle police officers wait outside Grace Church in Middleburg Heights, OH, to escort the body of slain Cleveland Patrolman Shane Bartek to Holy Cross Cemetery. Bartek, 25, was off-duty when he was shot and killed during a carjacking. An 18-year-old woman and 28-year-old man stand charged in the crime.