US soldier steals armored vehicle for a GTA-like joyride

US soldier steals armored vehicle for a GTA-like joyride
The armored personnel carrier stolen from a Virginia National Guard base drives along a street in Richmond, Virginia. (Parker Slaybaugh via Reuters)
Updated 06 June 2018
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US soldier steals armored vehicle for a GTA-like joyride

US soldier steals armored vehicle for a GTA-like joyride

WASHINGTON: Talk about a spectacular joyride: an American soldier commandeered an armored personnel carrier and led police on a chase along a major highway for more than an hour.
In scenes that drew comparisons with the anarchic Grand Theft Auto videogame series, the vehicle tore through streets, ignoring traffic signals — and the screaming sirens in hot pursuit.
Cops in the eastern state of Virginia were unable to deploy the stingers that might normally be laid out across the roads to burst a stolen car’s tires.
Instead, they raced along behind the sand-colored all-terrain vehicle, whose caterpillar tracks were carrying it at speeds of up to 40 miles (65 kilometers) per hour.
“This is INSANE!” wrote Twitter-user @ParkerSlay89, posting a video of the chase.
“Someone has hijacked a ‘Tank-like’ vehicle from Fort Pickett and just drove it by our apartment!”
Kayleigh, a bystander, told local TV network WWBT: “Honestly it kinda reminds me of the Grand Theft Auto games where the tanks drive just in the middle of the city, it’s surreal.”
The wildly successful Grand Theft Auto series is an open-world video game in which players create mayhem across an urban landscape, stealing vehicles and committing crimes.
Virginia State Police Sargent Keeli Hill told reporters the APC, which was not equipped with any weapons, had been boosted from a Virginia National Guard base and driven along a major road to the state capital, Richmond.
During the pursuit, officers closed exit ramps on the highway, Hill said, adding the soldier eventually stopped the vehicle and surrendered.
High-speed police chases are a regular feature of US news networks, many of which dispatch helicopters to give their audience a bird’s-eye view of the action.