NORWOOD. N.C. — A Norwood police officer fought for his life during an assault following a traffic stop Friday night near Norwood Elementary School, town officials told Channel 9.
Authorities said that Norwood Detective Michael Hodgson pulled over a car just before 9 p.m., but the situation quickly turned into a dangerous one and left the officer fighting to survive.
Hodgson stopped a motorist, later identified as Timothy Robinson, for having a defective headlight, and was then pulled into the car by Robinson, who sped away with the door still open, officials said.
Hodgson held on with his legs dangling outside of the moving vehicle at speeds estimated above 80 mph, while Robinson continued to kick, punch and fight him, officials said.
“He was trying to physically harm me and/or kill me. I think he was trying to kill me,” Hodgson told Norwood officials in an audio recording obtained by Channel 9. "He had to have been rolling at least 70, 80, 90 miles an hour with my legs dangling out (of) the car."
Robinson was in jail for less than 12 hours. He paid more than $112,000 to bail out, which is 15 percent of his $750,000 bond. He admitted he had a weapon on him and surrendered it. Moments after being asked to step out of the car, Hodgson continued his search.
“I had my back turned to the driver-side door and he charges me, slams me up against (sic), jumps in the car. He grabs my shirt and pulls me,” Hodgson said in the recording.
Officials said Robinson commented that “when they got to the bridge, they would both die tonight.”
“The suspect told Detective Hodgson, ‘I'm going to kill you tonight and I'm going to kill myself and I'm going to run us off the bridge," Norwood Police Chief James Wilson said.
Officials said as they approached the Rocky River Bridge south of Norwood, Robinson appeared to be intentionally directing the vehicle into the bridge, but Hodgson wrestled the steering wheel left as they approached the bridge to stay on the roadway.
At one point, Hodgson stunned Robinson with a Taser, got control of the steering wheel and forced the car off the road onto Highway 52 in Anson County.
Officials said the car drove over an embankment, went airborne, clipped trees, and came to a stop in a private backyard.
Hodgson ran after Robinson and tackled him before other officers assisted in the arrest.
“Last night, Norwood could have too been mourning the loss of another dedicated law enforcement officer,” said town administrator John Mullis. “By the grace of God, the event did not turn tragic. After interviewing Detective Hodgson, I am absolutely amazed at his thought processes as we ran through the previous event together.”
“Absolutely, this is a miracle,” Wilson said.
Robinson faces charges of assault to a law enforcement officer with a firearm, attempted first-degree murder, injury to personal property, resisting a public officer, kidnapping, and trafficking in cocaine, among others.
Cox Media Group