Lakeside ‘Killer’ Threat Busted: GPS Trail Leads Cops To Terrified Mom And Child

A tense domestic dispute in Lakeside turned into a rolling rescue on Saturday when police used GPS data from a woman’s phone to track a moving car and pull a mother and small child out of danger, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

How Officers Traced The Vehicle

Around 11:45 a.m., Lakeside officers were called in to help a neighboring agency after a 911 caller reported hearing a man screaming and “threatening to kill her,” the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported. Instead of chasing vague directions, officers turned to the GPS data from the woman’s phone, using it to follow the car’s real-time movements and guide units to intercept the vehicle.

Officer’s Quick Action

Officer C. Thibodeaux eventually spotted a black Nissan Rogue. What he saw next erased any doubt that something was very wrong. A woman in the back left seat was hanging partway out of the window, frantically waving and screaming for help, according to the police account.

Thibodeaux moved in, stopped the car, and pulled the man’s mother and a small child from the vehicle. The driver was taken into custody on the spot, with no pursuit reported. Felony warrants in the area are handled by the Tarrant County Sheriff’s Office, according to the county.

Arrest And Charges

The driver, whose name authorities did not release after the arrest, now faces charges of aggravated assault causing serious injuries and unlawful restraint, and police say he already had multiple felony warrants out with the Tarrant County Sheriff’s Office, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

The department later took to social media to praise Officer Thibodeaux, calling his handling of the fast-moving incident an example of professionalism that helped bring a potentially deadly situation to a safe end…

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