A woman who found herself getting body-slammed during a road rage incident in Ohio has confirmed her identity and revealed that she “learned her lesson.”
Katreena Aiken, 36, identified herself as the driver from the Jan. 4 incident in Toledo, Ohio, after video showed a woman driving a blue sedan slam on her brakes and jump out of her car to verbally attack the driver behind her.
“Let’s go, get out of the f—ing car,” she yelled, taunting the other motorist.
That driver’s passenger got out of the red sedan to confront the woman, and appeared to try to calm her down, TMZ reported.
But as he walked away, the woman punched him in the face from behind, to which he responded with a punch of his own before picking her up and slamming her to the ground.
The woman is seen on the clip moaning and clutching her head and getting no immediate help from anyone, despite initially gesturing to her vehicle and yelling, “My man’s right f—ing there. Come and put your f—ing hands on me.”
But a second video shows that after the red sedan drove off, a white SUV pulled up to the scene and a man got out to blast the woman for her actions, the Daily Mail reported.
“Why you jumping out of the car on people?” the unidentified man asked the woman as she put her head down.
She started to argue but he refused to listen to her, advising her to “get in the car” and “get home,” before they both drove off.
It is unclear what the relationship is between the man and woman.
Aiken took to a local community Facebook page to confirm that, yes, that was indeed her in the video, according to the Mail.
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Other users questioned her with one asking if she “learned that day.”
Aiken replied, “Sure did! Hopefully we all learned a lesson!”
Prince Flores, a spokesperson with the Toledo Police Department, told WTVG that nobody called the incident in, so it has not been investigated.
The officer suggested drivers call 911 if they feel like they are dealing with an aggressive driver.
“If you feel like someone is just aggressively making actions to kind of get your attention, driving too close, honking their horn, things like that. What we want you to do is try to get away from them as safely as you can. If it continues to be a problem, call 911.”