News

Suspect whose pursuit ended in city Friday still at large

File photo of Charlottesville Police cruiser. Photo: Contributed/City of Charlottesville Communications.


CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA (CVILLE RIGHT NOW) – A suspect who police pursued from Buckingham County all the way to Charlottesville on Friday, only to have him escape in the city, is still at large, Charlottesville Commonwealth Attorney Joe Platania said.

“I do want to publicly comment on this because I think the public deserves to know,” Platania said, declining to name the suspect. “My understanding is that the individual is still wanted, that they’ve identified who it was.  He was wanted out of one or two other jurisdictions for offenses, and he’s now presumably wanted in Charlottesville for felony eluding. He’s alleged to have committed a crime in the city, so he’ll be charged with that in addition to the other jurisdictions he eluded in and the other jurisdictions where he’s got warrants.  Just so the public knows, law enforcement is on top of that and actively looking for this individual who they believed they have identified.”

At approximately 4:44 p.m. Friday, multiple law enforcement agencies were engaged in a pursuit of a suspect who was eluding the police.  The chase originated in Buckingham County, which is approximately an hour south of Charlottesville.

As the high-speed chase entered the city, Charlottesville police officers responded and began assisting in the pursuit.  However, the apprehension of the suspect was never confirmed by local authorities, nor by the state police. The chase garnered even more attention because it was during a peak travel time on the opening weekend of the weekly free downtown music festival “Fridays After Five” and the pursuit in the 1200 block of Monticello Avenue was visible to multiple motorists and pedestrians in a very dense area of Charlottesville.

Platania provided an update from the City’s perspective on where the case stands in an appearance on WINA Morning News.

Platania said that, given the density of Charlottesville, his office takes the charge of eluding very seriously for a number of reasons.  “Charlottesville is ten square miles, it is a very small jurisdiction and there’s not wide stretches of road where you can get speed up.  So, in our office one of the most serious offenses is felony eluding and we say to judges, look, you’ve got to try really hard to get to high speeds and eluding in Charlottesville is not trying to pull away from a trooper on 64 or 81, not that that’s good or safe, but in Charlottesville area to your point of how small it is and the density, it is an incredibly dangerous offense and its treated that way by the prosecutors and hopefully the judges.”

 

Latest Stories

10 hours ago in Sports, Trending

NFL teams are almost on the clock as draft night in the Steel City has arrived

Put aside the mock drafts because it's time for the real deal. The NFL draft is here in the Steel City.

10 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Taylor Swift and Bad Bunny top Spotify’s first all-time most streamed artists list

It's her, hi! Taylor Swift has topped Spotify's first ever list of the most streamed artists of all time, published Thursday morning. She's followed by Puerto Rican superstar Bad Bunny. That comes as no surprise: In 2025 the artist born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio was named the streaming giant's most played artist of the year for a fourth time, dethroning Swift.

10 hours ago in National, Trending

Trump reclassifies state-licensed medical marijuana as a less-dangerous drug in a historic shift

President Donald Trump's acting attorney general on Thursday signed an order reclassifying state-licensed medical marijuana as a less-dangerous drug, a major policy shift long sought by advocates who said cannabis should never have been treated like heroin by the federal government.

1 day ago in Entertainment, Music

Alan Osmond, the eldest member of the Osmonds, has died at 76

Alan Osmond, the eldest member of the chart-topping family act The Osmonds, died Monday after decades with multiple sclerosis. He was 76.

1 day ago in Entertainment

An Instagram DM changed everything for Rachel Reid, Jacob Tierney and ‘Heated Rivalry’

To the cheers and applause of thousands of BookCon attendees, "Heated Rivalry" author Rachel Reid and director-screenwriter Jacob Tierney walked on to the main event stage at New York's Jacob Javits Convention Center. The two Canadians have been international celebrities for just a few months, and still find themselves wondering if all the noise is for someone else.