24 hours after the spectacular and frightening refusal to comply in the Montmartre district (18th century) in Paris, the Parisian police officers still had a hit and run to manage with "rebellion and voluntary violence against a person holding public authority".
This Sunday, at 2 a.m., a man and a woman were arrested after a chase on the edge of Paris, in Saint-Ouen (Seine-Saint-Denis).
It all started on the Paris ring road, at Porte de Saint-Ouen (17th century).
The police officers of the night BAC (anti-crime brigade) of Paris on patrol spot a vehicle, a Peugeot 208 with a driver and a passenger on board.
Officials see the driver committing a traffic violation.
While pursuing the fugitive, the policeman falls into an ambush
The BAC crew then decides to control the vehicle.
Except that the woman refuses, starts at full speed, takes the direction of the avenue de Clichy (XVII) and ends her race by embedding her car in a stud.
The driver was not injured and the police pulled her out of her car and arrested her.
She was taken back to the police station and taken into custody.
During this time, the passenger took to his heels.
One of the policemen comes after him.
And catches up with him a little further, rue Aimé-Césaire, next to the Saint-Ouen metro station on line 14. The arrest is tough.
The official manages to control the fugitive but finds himself in an ambush.
Several men appear and surround him, steal his telescopic baton and beat him.
The policeman owes his salvation to the arrival of reinforcements.
The official is transported to the hospital, without vital prognosis involved.
The fugitive, arrested, injured in the brow bone, was also taken to the hospital and then placed in police custody.
The injured policeman filed a complaint.
The investigation was entrusted to the 18th century police station.