Trending Topics

Quick-thinking Minn. officer uses cruiser to push burning EV away from gas pumps

Brooklyn Center police and firefighters worked together to contain the fire, which required 30,000 gallons of water to suppress

605119874_1226549309666147_39907.jpg

Brooklyn Center Fire Department/Facebook

By Paul Walsh
Star Tribune

BROOKLYN CENTER, Minn. — An electric vehicle’s battery caught fire next to gasoline pumps in Brooklyn Center, creating a potential disaster that station staff and a police officer teamed up to avert.

The brief flirtation with a large blaze occurred on Dec. 30 at Winner Gas at the intersection of Humboldt and 65th avenues N., the Brooklyn Center Fire Department said.

| DOWNLOAD: 26 on 2026: A police leadership playbook

Firefighters arrived about 10:45 p.m. and saw the burning car parked next to gas pumps while the driver was inside the store, the Fire Department said in a statement.

Police Cmdr. Richard Gabler said gas station staff cut off the gas flow to the pumps in response to seeing the smoldering vehicle close by.

Moments later, “a quick-thinking police officer used [his] squad to push the vehicle away from the fuel pumps and into the open parking lot,” the Fire Department statement read.

Shutting down the pumps “reduced the chances of a major fire,” Gabler said. “However, there would still be a chance of property and other vehicles potentially catching fire had the vehicle not been moved.”

According to the Brooklyn Center Fire Department :

Firefighters used the “turtle,” a device that was connected to a fire hose and sprayed water from the underside of the 2023 fully electric Kia EV6 to cool the battery.

Once the turtle was in place, firefighters covered the car with a tarplike fire blanket to control the vapors and the smoke.

“Typical car fires we extinguish in 10 minutes and use about 500 gallons of water,” the Fire Department statement continued. “Electric vehicle battery fires take more time and lots more water to cool the batteries down.”

In this case, fire personnel were on the scene for about 2½ hours until 1:20 a.m. on Dec. 31 and used about 30,000 gallons of water.

A national auto insurance research organization analyzed data from the National Transportation Safety Board and found that all-electric EVs were involved in about 25 fires for every 100,000 vehicles sold. That compares to roughly 1,530 gas-powered vehicles and 3,475 hybrid vehicles involved in fires for every 100,000 sold.

In November 2024 , Kia issued a recall involving 2022 to 2024 EV6s, but it was not about any fire risk. The recall said the charging unit may become damaged and stop charging the 12-volt battery, leading to a loss of power.

Trending
Officer Nicholas O’Malley was indicted on a manslaughter charge in the fatal shooting of a man who had just carjacked a woman on March 11
After a Kalamazoo officer caught the baby, fire crews were able to use ladders to rescue the mother
Mayor Kirk Watson called on other city officials to reconsider their cancellation of the Flock Safety program after three suspects fired shots across 12 locations, injuring four
A policy update issued by Tampa Police leaders prohibits officers from requesting the Florida Highway Patrol to initiate pursuits that would not be allowed under TPD policy

©2026 The Minnesota Star Tribune. Visit startribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Company News
Connect daily vehicle inspections with maintenance workflows in a single, streamlined platform to enhance compliance and uptime for mission-critical fleets