When Stealing A Car Goes Wrong

The story begins on a(n)  ADJECTIVE morning at a  NOUN in  PLACE . A  COLOR  TYPE OF CAR was left  VERB ENDING IN ING and a  NOUN took his opportunity, jumped in and headed on his way. Unfortunately for all parties involved, a  NOUN was sat in the back of the car, bumping up the crime from carjacking to  SAME NOUN AS BEFORE napping. Naturally, the authorities were called and police were swiftly dispatched to catch up to the thief. Investigators identified the thief as  PERSONS NAME and the car was spotted along the road in  PLACE shortly after. When the police managed to follow his trail and catch up, the thief tried to shake them by  VERB ENDING IN ING off the highway and  VERB ENDING IN ING through several  PLURAL NOUN before returning to the highway. This is where things started taking a turn for the worse, instead of keeping his current vehicle, the thief used a  NOUN to block off a  COLOR  TYPE OF CAR and dragged the driver out. Leaving the original vehicle behind, the thief began to drive  ADVERB , hitting higher speeds and driving into oncoming traffic. The whole chase was being broadcast live and  PLURAL NOUN began to  VERB for everyone’s  PLURAL NOUN . The thief made another attempt to steal another car,  TYPE OF CAR , but was unable to gain access. The thief jumped into a damaged  TYPE OF CAR for a short while before deciding it was a good idea to go on foot. Luckily, the police caught the thief. Going on foot is never a good idea. The thief faces multiple charges, including first-degree  ACTION NOUN , attempted  ACTION NOUN and  ACTION NOUN , which amounted to a huge sentence of 160 years. All that was missing from the scenes was a  ADJECTIVE  ACTION NOUN , having  NOUN involved, a  ADJECTIVE trail of destruction and  PLURAL NOUN in the thief's wake,  ADJECTIVE cars and of course, the bad guy getting away by hiding in a(n)  NOUN and this would have been a real life video game.