PERU — A 15-year-old driver and two passengers, aged 19 and 16, were arrested Monday after they were seen traveling about 55 mph over the speed limit in a stolen SUV and fled an attempted traffic stop, police say.
The teens, all from South Bend, were taken into custody after they crashed into a ditch on U.S. 31 near Eel River Road and led police on a brief foot pursuit, according to Indiana State Police.
A pursuit began about 6 p.m. after an off-duty state trooper saw them traveling at about 115 mph in a 60 mph zone in a Jeep Cherokee on U.S. 31 near County Road 1400 South.
An on-duty trooper tried to stop the teens near Miami County Road 500 South, where they fled. Police chased the SUV until it crashed into the ditch.
The two passengers bailed and fled on foot, but the 16-year-old was detained immediately. Police found the 19-year-old in a nearby wooded area using a police dog and took him into custody.
No injuries were reported in the crash.
The driver faces charges of auto theft, resisting law enforcement with a vehicle, possession of stolen property, reckless driving, aggressive driving, and operating a vehicle without a driver's license.
Both passengers face one count each of resisting law enforcement.
WRTV does not name suspects until they've been formally charged.
-
After Biden policy shift, Russia says Ukraine fired 6 US-made missiles
Days after President Biden eased restrictions on Ukrainian use of American-made weapons, Russia said it was struck by six U.S.-made missiles.Republican proposes restroom ban as first openly transgender member joins House
Republican Rep. Nancy Mace is proposing banning transgender women from using the women's restroom as Rep. Sarah McBride becomes the House's first openly transgender member.The Success Center at Carriage House East hosts Thanksgiving food pantry
Residents could get turkey, turkey breast, and ham ahead of Thanksgiving thanks to Success Center, nestled inside Carriage House East Apartment Complex.Indiana Chamber discusses legislative priorities; session starts in Jan.
Typically, the Chamber releases specific policy positions but on Monday, that was not the case. Instead, they released six pillars they hope to focus on.