Before an arrest, officers launched a (virtual) room



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After the police saw a woman running on a wet road in Georgia, they arrested the driver and told him of the opportunity to stop him.

The woman, Sarah Webb, 24, was late for a change of hair On April 7, in Roswell, Georgia, a patrol car flew over a patrol car.

A camera worn by the body records the comments of a police officer to Ms. Webb: "The floor is wet. It is raining. You are going over 80 miles to the hour on this type of road. This is careless driving, ma'am. "

In the film, Ms. Webb can be seen handing her license and keys to the officer, who is heading to his patrol car." Three minutes elapse before the police officer arrives. officer returns to make an arrest

Two months passed before Ms. Webb learned what had happened between the time she was arrested and handcuffed, to be done.

"My civil liberties have been violated," Webb said on Friday, "Thinking that it is the people who are supposed to help us and who are watching us. My freedom has been endangered because of a currency reversal. It was a game for them. "

Technically, it was not a coin, but a simulation of a coin – an application on the cell phone of an officer." And it was not clear if the The results of this virtual draw, which took place at the bottom, influenced the decision of the officers.In fact, the officers had already suggested that the tails would lead to the woman's release, not her arrest.

But after that Rusty Grant, the head of the Roswell Police Department became aware of the episode, he says that both Kristee Wilson and Courtney Brown had been placed on administrative leave.