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Woman Nearly Runs Over Police & Totals Her Car

Bessie T. Dowd by Bessie T. Dowd
February 4, 2026
in Uncategorized
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Woman Nearly Runs Over Police & Totals Her Car

Campbell woman accused of running over police officer with car

A 32-year-old woman was charged after allegedly striking a Campbell police officer with a car outside a middle school during the morning drop off.

A 32-year-old woman was charged after allegedly running over a Campbell police officer with a car outside a middle school during the morning drop off.

According to the report, the officer was monitoring the traffic for late car riders February 24 and noticed a tan Chevy Equinox pull into a drop off spot with its blinkers on and remained parked.

The officer said he attempted to wave on the vehicle to move, but was ignored multiple times.

As the vehicle remained parked, the officer approached the driver, identified as 32-year-old Tashamare Harris, to inform her she was not allowed to park in the drop off zone.

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Police say Harris claimed that she was waiting for her daughter’s teacher and has parked there multiple times. Police say Harris refused to provide her license and name to the officer.

The officer stated that Harris initially pulled away but returned a few minutes later. This time, police say she walked out with her kid, purposely ignoring the officer after returning to the vehicle.

The report stated the officer warned Harris that he was going to detain her for traffic violations and to stay in front of her vehicle until a second officer arrived.

Police say Harris began reversing despite the officer’s command to stop followed by driving forward allegedly striking the officer, causing him to fall on the car’s hood.

After the incident, Harris allegedly blamed the officer, stating she didn’t like his tone when asking her to move.

Police say when the second officer arrived, Harris denied hitting the officer with the car and claimed his outfit was dirty because the car was and that he purposely fell on the hood.

Additionally, Harris allegedly called the first officer a “disgrace” and continued to insist that she did not run him over and that he purposely fell on the hood.

Court records show Harris is facing multiple criminal charges including assault on a police officer and obstructing official business, as well as traffic violations including slow speed and failure to comply.

Video shows Pennsylvania officer plowing down woman in municipal parking lot

UPPER MERION TOWNSHIP, Pa. — An police officer plowed down a woman in a municipal parking lot two years ago. The case is in litigation and there are questions about who’s to blame.

It was a warm June night. Upper Merion Township’s annual “Concerts Under the Stars” series was underway.

Natasha Shahu walked along cars in a parking lot when an officer hit her from behind.

“I’m very lucky I am alive,” Shahu said.

Shahu describes the accident like a tornado hitting.

The video shows her stagger up, clearly in pain and asks Officer James Siegfried, “Didn’t you see me?”

“He told me, ‘I hit you.’ I said, ‘Are you sure I’m going to survive? I don’t want to die. I’m too young.’ I remember those words,” Shahu recalled.

Attorney Todd Jacobs who represents Shahu spoke with 6abc, as well.

“My client, Mrs. Shahu, who is wearing a bright yellow top and white pants. There are no obstructions. There’s absolutely no reason that if this gentleman was paying attention that he couldn’t have avoided this accident,” said Jacobs.

When Jacobs brought the video to 6abc Investigators, we reviewed it and determined it to be simply an accident.

But a closer look at the police report and it seems police are trying to blame the 53-year-old for being mowed down.

The police report states Officer Siegfried admits he didn’t see Shahu, but the majority of it focuses on the police parking lot being clearly a restricted area.

Jacobs is critical of the report, saying, “They take a statement, and prepare a police report which frankly is one of the most self-serving bias documents I’ve read in 12 years of practicing law.”

Shahu had just left the summer concert at the township building with her husband, daughter, and grandchildren. The township’s public parking lot was bustling with families. An ice cream truck even patrolled the grounds. Officer Siegfried, at one point, stops to allow a dad and his child pass by.

Shahu said the concert had just ended and she was helping her daughter and young grandchildren to their car.

Her husband was in the upper parking lot. He told her that the lot was congested and he couldn’t get to her. So she tried to make her way to him, and then got lost. She claims she didn’t realize she was in a restricted area.

Jacobs said, “I would say that simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time in no way permits an officer to run you down with his vehicle.”

Upper Merion police and a private attorney retained by the township declined to comment, citing pending litigation.

We submitted Right to Know requests to Camden County, Wilmington, and the Philadelphia police departments to find out how often police hit pedestrians. We found them to be rare.

Shahu said she suffered a broken hand, torn ankle tendon along with months of back and neck pain. She said she’s incurred $30,000 in medical expenses. She and her attorney said the township has only offered around $20,000.

Jacobs said, “The township here has been unfair. And that’s why I’m in this chair right now.”

The sign entering the police parking lot reads ‘Police Only.’ But it’s not clear if that mean just vehicles or also pedestrians. We have many questions, but, again, police are not commenting due to the pending litigation.

ICE officer fatally shoots driver through car window in Minneapolis

Minneapolis Mayor: ‘ICE, get the f*ck out’

 The crashed SUV after an ICE agent shot the driver at point-blank range through the window on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. The driver died, according to the Department of Homeland Security. (Photo by Nicole Neri/Minnesota Reformer)

Leer en español.

An ICE officer fatally shot a 37-year-old woman driving an SUV through her car window in south Minneapolis on Wednesday morning.

The deadly confrontation immediately ratcheted up the intensity of what was already a brutal crackdown on Minnesota and its immigrants by the Trump administration — and in a community with raw memories of the police murder of George Floyd.

Video of the incident shared with the Reformer shows masked ICE officers approach a Honda Pilot stopped in the middle of Portland Avenue near 34th Street. One officer tells the driver to “get out of the f*cking car” and tries to open the door. The driver then slowly backs up and then pulls forward, appearing to try to leave. An officer at the front of the vehicle fires three shots and the SUV travels a short distance before crashing into a parked car.

The woman was transported to Hennepin County Medical Center, where she was pronounced dead, the Minneapolis chief of police said.

A group of Minneapolis City Council members identified her in a statement as Renee Nicole Good, a Minneapolis resident. They said she was a “member of our community” and demanded justice for her killing.

The witness who took the video, Caitlin Callenson, said she was on a walk when she saw an ICE vehicle stuck in the snow. As more ICE vehicles arrived, bystanders blew whistles in protest, and the driver of the SUV tried to block the ICE vehicles.

Callenson said she did not see ICE agents attempting to detain anyone leading up to or after the shooting.

Tricia McLaughlin, assistant Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, quickly confirmed the death on X but gave a contradictory version of what happened. She accused the driver of attempting to run over and kill a law enforcement officer in an “act of domestic terrorism.”

https://youtube.com/watch?v=K9CJY5p0xz4%3Ffeature%3Doembed

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, at a news conference in Minnesota for the second day in a row, accused Good of “stalking and impeding” ICE operations and that the officer acted appropriately in killing her.

“He used his training to save his own life and that of his colleagues,” she said Wednesday.

Noem said ICE will continue its operations as usual after the killing in what the agency said is its largest operation ever, with more than 2,000 agents and officers in Minnesota.

U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, who represents Minneapolis, accused ICE officers of “terrorizing neighborhoods.”

“I am beyond outraged that their reckless, callous actions led to the killing of a legal observer in Minneapolis,” Omar said in a statement. “This administration has shown, yet again, that it does not care about the safety of Minnesotans.”

MAGA supporters showed video from different angles that purported to show the officer acting in self-defense, while former senior Obama administration official Tommy Vietor reshared the Reformer video on X and called the incident, “an execution by this ICE officer.” Americans can expect a debate over the shooting for years to come, regardless of the outcome of any investigations.

 Law enforcement sprays demonstrators with chemical irritants at the scene where an ICE office shot and killed a 37-year-old woman in her car in Minneapolis on Jan. 7, 2026. (Photo by Nicole Neri/Minnesota Reformer)

After the shots were fired, the driver “then was completely slumped over in the vehicle,” said Emily Heller, another witness.

Federal agents wouldn’t allow a man who said he is a physician to examine the driver, Heller said. Emergency medical technicians arrived 15 minutes later, she said. First responders were unable to get close to the scene because ICE agents did not move their cars to let them through.

“There was chaos and ambulance and fire trucks couldn’t get through,” Callenson said. “They had to walk through all of the ICE vehicles on foot to try to administer first aid.”

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey said he had been dreading this moment since the Department of Homeland Security began ramping up immigration enforcement in the Twin Cities.

Frey called ICE’s statement saying the shooting was in self-defense was “bullsh*t” and blasted the agency’s presence in the city saying they’re only “causing chaos and distrust.”

“To ICE, get the f*ck out of Minneapolis,” Frey said.

He urged residents to remain peaceful and not “take the bait” from the federal government.

“They want us to respond in a way that creates a military occupation in our city,” Frey said. “Let’s not let them.”

People lay white roses where a 37-year-old woman was shot and killed by an ICE officer in Minneapolis on Jan. 7, 2026. (Photo by Madison McVan/Minnesota Reformer)

Dozens of federal agents from ICE and the FBI, as well as Minneapolis police officers and Hennepin County sheriff deputies responded to the scene.

While ICE agents left the scene, the standoff between law enforcement and protesters is ongoing.

As some federal officers attempted to leave, protestors blocked their vehicle. The officers fired a noxious gas at close range, causing distress and vomiting for many demonstrators and journalists.

Protesters hurled insults at Minneapolis Police officers, who are not supposed to assist with immigration enforcement, but were on the scene Wednesday morning.

After law enforcement cleared the scene, demonstrators placed white roses where blood stained the snow.

City Council members including Robin Wonsley and Jamal Osman addressed the crowd, saying the area was an active crime scene, and that MPD was present to investigate.

Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said at a Wednesday press conference that they have yet to see information indicating that the shooting was justified and there was nothing to indicate the woman was a target of immigration enforcement activity, O’Hara said.

Minneapolis police officers secured the crime scene to preserve evidence, O’Hara said. The Federal Bureau of Investigation is now jointly conducting an investigation into the use of deadly force with the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension.

Hennepin County Sheriff Dawanna Witt emphasized the need for local involvement in the investigation for transparency: “With all due respect to the federal level, we do need to make sure that our local agencies are involved.”

Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty issued a statement soon after the shooting saying “pushing hard for a local investigation which is the only way to ensure full transparency and review by our office.”

U.S. Rep. Betty McCollum, a St. Paul Democrat, called on Noem, who filmed herself observing ICE actions in Minneapolis on Tuesday, to immediately stop the ICE operation “to restore order and prevent further injuries.”

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