Brooklyn, NY - A sanitation worker who reportedly drove through the heart of Brooklyn’s Jewish community with both a gun and antipsychotic drugs in his vehicle is under arrest after a bizarre chain of events that began with a vandalism spree in Borough Park on Thursday morning and ended with a police chase in Flatbush several hours later.
Police said that they received a call at 8:49 AM on Thursday morning from passers-by who observed a uniformed sanitation worker throwing trash at a religious statue in front of a church located at the corner of 58th Street and 13th Avenue.
According to a witness who spoke with CBS News, the sanitation worker was shouting obscenities and consumed alcohol in his truck before driving away from the scene. Surveillance footage shows the suspect returning approximately half an hour later to vandalize a second statue in the church’s front yard.
Police canvassed the area looking for the suspect, finally spotting him in his truck at Avenue L and E9th Street several hours later. The sanitation worker refused to pull over for police and tried to escape in his street sweeper. He was observed driving through a red light in his escape attempt before he was finally stopped by the NYPD and arrested at approximately 12:15 PM.
The suspect, identified as 38 year old Roman Protas, was found to have a bottle of anti-psychotic drugs prescribed to another person in his vehicle. WABC News is reporting that Protas, who allegedly has eight prior arrests, also had a gun in his truck.
Protas was charged with Criminal Possession Controlled Substance, two counts of Reckless Endangerment, Criminal Tampering 3rd Degree, Reckless Driving, Disobey Traffic Control Device and unlawfully fleeing a police officer in a motor vehicle at the time of his arrest.
Hate Crime charges were later added to one of the counts of Reckless Endangerment because of a statement Protas made to police at the time of his arrest saying that he hated Roman Catholics.