Guy Was Stuck at 125mph For an Hour After Losing Breaks
Could you imagine a trip to a supermarket ending in a high-speed chase going 125 mph?
According to the Atlantic.
Frank Lecerf, from his home in Pont-de-Metz, near the French city of Amiens, was making his weekly trip to the supermarket in his Renault Laguna. He was going 60 miles an hour when the car’s speed dial jammed. Lecerf tried to brake. Instead of slowing, though, the car sped up — with each tap on the brake leading to more acceleration. Eventually, the car reached a speed of 125 mph — and then remained stuck there. For an hour.
Lecerf, frantic, called the police from his car — and they sent an escort that The Guardian describes as “a platoon of police cars” to help him navigate a highway full of fellow cars and get them to swerve out of the way of the speeding car. (Lecerf stayed, appropriately, in the fast lane.) What resulted was a small miracle of technological coordination: Responding to emergency services’ advance warnings, three different toll booths raised their barriers as Lecerf approached. A police convoy ensured that roads were kept clear for the speeding car. Fellow drivers, obligingly, got out of the way. Emergency services patched Lecerf through to a Renault engineer who tried — though failed — to help Lecerf get the speeding car to slow down.
“My life flashed before me,” Lecerf later told Le Courrier Picard. “I just wanted it to stop.”
Finally, it did. The goal everyone had been working for, coordinating for — the speeding car running out of gas before its Newtonian nightmare ended in violence — was achieved. Lecerf’s car, finally out of fuel, came to rest in a ditch. He had driven, ultimately, from Pont-de-Metz in northern France and through the French coast up through Callais and Dunkirk, eventually crossing the border into Belgium. The little Renault stopped, finally, in the town of Alveringem.
Before it did, though, Lecerf was stuck in his speeding car for an hour. (It’s unclear what, exactly, went wrong with the car — though Lecerf’s upcoming lawsuit against Renault should help to figure that out.) The man and his vehicle and his communal, ad hoc escort ended up traveling 125 miles together before they got their Hollywood ending — an ending made possible not by individual heroics, but by collective effort.






put the car in nuetral…take it out of drive so the accelorator doesnt speed up.
at 125 tho, that would be like crashing into a wall, but i see what you were saying. i would of turned the car as i put the brake on.
neutral* not breaks, they were gone.
the car speeded up to 125….if the car is put in neutral it wont continue to pick up speed unless youre going down hill….neutral will not make the car come to a sudden stop or a wall like you said.
That’s alot of gas in that car!
that was amazing teamwork! so glad no one was hurt.
It Wouldn’t put it past me that police and elite are planning to promote some new electronic gun technology to stop cars like in fast and furious and say its “for our protection” lol
God saved his life because he could have died so easily.