Highway pursuit ends with ‘traumatic’ dog bites for man

A dramatic chase ended with a man who was accused of throwing tires into the intense traffic taken to the hospital with a “traumatic” police dog bite from a moving vehicle.
26 -year -old man James Rae Slade could not go to court on Thursday after he was arrested with the help of police dog Stryker after a few suburbs in the north of Brisbane.
26 -year -old Slade and Tyger Jack Titmarsh face potential life penalties after being accused of endangering traffic on a large highway before their dramatic arrest.
The police were called to the Bruce Motorway at 13:00 on Wednesday at Murrumba Downs in northern Brisbane after firing reports fired from a vehicle.
The court was told that a black Commodore fled to civil servants and was monitored by a police helicopter and joined the highway to the north.
The police used a rubber deflation device and it is claimed that Commodore’s two residents have thrown a rural road in Armstrong Creek, northwest in a few suburbs before it was arrested with the help of Stryker.
Titmarsh and Slade were accused of a large number of dangerous driving, the police, stolen property and motor vehicle theft.
The current charges are not related to firearms.
On Thursday, they were caused by the Hundred Pine Rivers Magistrate Court.
Magistrates’ judge David Shepherd heard that Slade could not appear in court due to dog bites that required surgery.
“There is a note here that he’s currently in the Royal Brisbane Hospital,” Shepherd said. He said.
Titmarsh’s lawyer said that the most serious accusation against his client is to endanger the safe use of the vehicles with maximum life imprisonment and relevant transport infrastructure.
Police claim that Titmarsh and Slade are creating a danger by throwing a tire and leaving a fire extinguisher from a moving vehicle and intense traffic.
Titmarsh was also accused of unlicensed driving and driving when he was drunk.
Titmarsh and Slade are accused of allegedly having a suspected debit card and an iPad tablet computer that is alleged to be after Commodore.
Mr. Shepherd postponed his case for Titmarsh on September 18th and ordered the police to offer a brief evidence to his lawyer until 3 September.
The prosecutor told Mr. Shepherd that Slade had experienced a “quite a traumatic event” and could not join the court until next week.
“I don’t want to postpone it for so long without giving him the opportunity to appear in court.” He said.
Slade’s case was postponed to Friday.
Titmarsh’s lawyer did not apply for bail and both defendants were detained.
