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The footage captured the moment a ‘sovereign citizen’ driver clashed with police before she was dragged out of her car.
The woman was recently arrested in Gold Coast, Queensland, and recorded her tense confrontation with police.
Video showed the woman trying to talk about the officer, refusing to give her name and calling him aggressive.
The woman begins to comment on the video that she has just been stopped by the police before being interrupted by one of the officers.
He asks her to provide her full name, but she refuses and asks for her personal details.
The officer agrees to the request before asking the woman a second time for her name.
‘I do not consent,’ said the woman.
The officer warns the woman that she will be arrested if she continues to refuse to provide her details.
Under what law? said the woman.
The officer tells the woman to listen to him before intruding.
The woman filmed the confrontation on her phone and shows her trying to talk about the officer, refusing to give her name and calling him aggressive.
“Listen to me, please,” she said.
The woman tries to cut off the policeman while he is speaking to her.
“You are being very aggressive,” he said. ‘What crime have I committed?’
“You are not licensed at this time,” the officer replied. And you’re bothering me.
The officer and his colleague explain that the woman is under arrest at which point the woman tries to roll up the window only for the officer to block it with his arm.
‘Don’t blame me for that, I’ll break your window,’ he warned.
The woman accuses them of being violent as the officers stand around her car.
“I can’t believe the police are going to arrest me for a breathalyzer,” he said.
‘Violence, violence by the police! I haven’t done anything wrong. We are going to discuss this very well. I’ll open the door if you calm down.
The incident comes less than a week after a police officer smashed the car window of a sovereign citizen when he refused to leave the vehicle in a separate incident.
The officer reaches into the car and opens the door.
The woman passes the phone to her passenger so they can continue recording the incident as the officer grabs her right arm and begins to pull her out of the vehicle.
Images of the altercation were uploaded to Twitter, where some social media users criticized the driver’s actions.
“I love these Soviet arrest videos. Best since the Jerry Springer Show,’ wrote one.
A second added: ‘Why are these people filming things like this? He makes them look bad with the police, as he refuses to answer their questions.
The video comes less than a week after a police officer broke the window of a sovereign citizen’s car when she refused to leave the vehicle in a separate incident.
The incident took place in Coffs Harbour, NSW, on Wednesday and began when an officer asked 52-year-old Helen Delaney to roll down her window.
Chloe Fisher was pulled over by police while driving on the road in Gundagai, in rural New South Wales.
The police officer remains composed in the video as the driver continues his ramblings explaining that their license plates are kept in the car.
She refused to wind him up all the way and also refused to give her name or driver’s license before telling the officer she “had no jurisdiction.”
She told the so-called sovereign citizen that she was being stopped because she was driving without registration.
Subsequent checks found that the registration of the car Delaney was driving had expired in July of last year.
She was arrested and charged with various offenses before being released on bail to appear in Coffs Harbor Local Court on Thursday.
Earlier this month, another driver claimed she was “not part of the state” when she confronted an officer over failing to display registered license plates.
Chloe Fisher was pulled over by police while driving near Gundagai in rural New South Wales.
He used his phone to film his conversation with the policewoman, who asked him for forms of identification and whether the vehicle was registered.
Chloe got out of the car and explained that she hadn’t shown any license plates because she was in the process of ‘going sovereign’.