Man 'kidnapped' by his runaway electric car - forcing him to call police to ram him off the road
  • 7 months ago
A man says he was ''kidnapped'' by his own runaway electric car - forcing him to dodge red lights and roundabouts and call police to ram it off the road.

Brian Morrison, 53, says his new posh motor started driving itself - and he had to dial 999 from inside.

He had been heading home from work on Sunday (1/10) when he says his brand new electric car decided to take control - and the brakes wouldn't work.

Becoming stuck at 30mph he says his MG ZS EV fully electric vehicle suffered a ''catastrophic malfunction''.

Brian called police who were forced to forcibly stop the runaway car by allowing it to slowly crash into their police van.

Even after forcing the car to a halt Brian says that the car tried to keep moving once police tried moving their vehicle.

A roadside repair mechanic later said they had 'never seen' anything like the incident.

Brian, from Glasgow, Scotland, said that he was 'lucky' that the incident had taken place late at night at just after 10pm.

He said: “I realised something was wrong when I was coming up to a roundabout, and went to slow down - but it didn't do it.

"Then I heard a loud grinding noise that sounded like break pads - but because it was such a new car I knew it couldn't be a problem with them.

"I managed to get around roundabout going at about 30mph, and and then had long road ahead of me, so I assumed it would stop without me accelerating - but it didn't.

"I have mobility issues, so I couldn't even jump out - I was completely trapped inside the car going at 30mph.

"It might not sound like it is very fast, but when you have no control over the speed and you're completely stuck inside it's terrifying."

Brian initially called his wife in a panic to ask her to warn cars ahead of him that he could not stop his car.

After realising that he would soon have to navigate traffic lights and several roundabouts, and worried about crashing into pedestrians and pub-goers headed home, he eventually called 999.

He said: “The car was just running away on its own, there was nothing I could do.

"When I dialed 999, they sent police to help and put some engineers on the line to try and solve the problem, and they were asking if it was a self-driving car.

"It was the first time that the call handlers had experienced the issue, and they had no idea what to do.

''So eventually three police vehicles arrived and were driving in front of me and behind me.

"I was 100% concentrating on my steering, so when a police van pulled up besides me and asked if I was Brian and if I was okay, I just yelled 'no i'm not, I cant stop'."

Police initially tried having Brian throw his electronic key through their van window before driving off - but this failed to disengage the engine.

After that, they tried to get Brian to forcibly shut off the engine by pressing the power button three times, which also failed.

He then was asked to hold the power button for over two seconds, which also failed to stop the car.