The chase began in Statford and wound up in Walsgrave
This is moment a high speed police pursuit ended in a residential street after the driver was floored by a white van man.
Martin Bates, owner of Coventry Man with a Van, and his friend Thomas Snowdon were driving along Woodway Lane, Walsgrave, when they happened to stop a wanted man in his tracks.
Footage from Martin's dashcam shows a swarm of cars barrelling towards them in pursuit of a man that they had followed from Stratford.
The pursuit was part of the force's Operation Trivium which aims to catch wanted criminals travelling on the region's road network.
Mr Bates told the Telegraph: “We could see the police helicopter was really close to us, so we turned towards it to see what was going on, being a bit nosey.
“Then all these police cars suddenly came towards us and I was with my mate and we saw this guy running towards us.
“So I shouted at Thomas to get out and stop him, and the guy got floored and then arrested.
“It just seemed like police couldn’t get him and it was a lot of drama.”
The suspect was taken in to custody by officers at around 10.30am this morning.
The police pursuit had started earlier in the day in Stratford when a driver failed to stop for officers from Warwickshire Police taking part in Operation Trivium.
The operation is the force’s crack down on foreign national offenders using roads for criminal activity.
The car was pursued from the south Warwickshire town all the way to Coventry, and one eyewitness reported seeing six police cars, a police motorcycle, two unmarked cars and the police helicopter in the Walsgrave area.
Police cars were also heard racing along the city centre ring road with sirens blaring on their way to the location.
Sergeant Jem Mountford of Warwickshire Police: “This will be our eighth time we have run Operation Trivium, and it has been a successful deterrent.
“There is an assumption that foreign nationals who commit crime in the United Kingdom are invincible, and that the road network is an easy way to facilitate such criminal activity.
“It is week-long operations like this that demonstrate our commitment to cross-border policing and partnership working to show that borders are no barrier to justice.”
