The nerve on this female driver. After repeatedly slamming into the parked car of a restaurant manager in her attempt to park, she casually walked in and tried to place an order for take-out.
The incident actually happened at the end of last month, but Daniel Rees, manager at Buffalo Wild Wings in Las Vegas, is reaching out to members of the public for help with tracking down the woman responsible. He tells the Review Journal that police have refused to investigate the hit and run, since it occurred on private property.
So Rees is releasing CCTV footage of the hit and run and of the moment the woman brazenly walked in the restaurant and tried to place an order, hoping someone will identify her. You can see it at the bottom of the page as well.
It happened right in front of the front door, as the woman tried to park her pickup truck. She repeatedly hit Rees’ Dodge SRT and then walked inside. She asked the clerk Show long the wait would be for a take-out order and stormed off when she heard it was 10 minutes. She didn’t mention anything about hitting the car.
Rees tells the publication that he noticed the damage to his car almost right after it happened, so he and another employee tried to go after the woman, but she sped off. He also called the police, but they refused to take the report.
“Rees’ car sustained damage on the rear bumper as well as a large crack on the front-end bumper after the woman’s vehicle pushed his car, which sits low to the ground, over a cement curb,” the Review Journal notes. The total cost of damages is of $1,000.
“I just couldn’t believe it,” Rees says for the publication. “And it’s the holidays. I just wouldn’t do that to anyone.”
So Rees is releasing CCTV footage of the hit and run and of the moment the woman brazenly walked in the restaurant and tried to place an order, hoping someone will identify her. You can see it at the bottom of the page as well.
It happened right in front of the front door, as the woman tried to park her pickup truck. She repeatedly hit Rees’ Dodge SRT and then walked inside. She asked the clerk Show long the wait would be for a take-out order and stormed off when she heard it was 10 minutes. She didn’t mention anything about hitting the car.
Rees tells the publication that he noticed the damage to his car almost right after it happened, so he and another employee tried to go after the woman, but she sped off. He also called the police, but they refused to take the report.
“Rees’ car sustained damage on the rear bumper as well as a large crack on the front-end bumper after the woman’s vehicle pushed his car, which sits low to the ground, over a cement curb,” the Review Journal notes. The total cost of damages is of $1,000.
“I just couldn’t believe it,” Rees says for the publication. “And it’s the holidays. I just wouldn’t do that to anyone.”