Escaped Horse Captured After Midnight Chase in Georgetown

escaped horse – Police say a runaway horse was quickly overtaken, cited, and safely returned to its owners in Georgetown.
A midnight escape that began with hoofbeats ended with officers in Georgetown catching a suspect with four legs.
Georgetown police reported an unusual patrol incident in which officers said they were “quickly overtaken” by the animal. describing the riderless suspect as Jacob the Horse.. In the department’s account. Jacob appeared to be moving at a pace that drew attention. with officers noting the incident was handled as a traffic-related matter once the horse was located.
The department said officers ultimately caught Jacob and issued a citation. In a detail that has fueled online chatter, police also indicated the citation was immediately “ingested,” and witnesses described Jacob as remaining unfazed—calmly returning to his usual demeanor even after the encounter.
That kind of surreal public-facing incident is a reminder of how quickly everyday routines can be disrupted, and how local law enforcement often has to improvise when the “suspect” is an animal.
Police said the horse was returned safely to its owners, but they also flagged that the circumstances leading to the escape were still being examined. The question of how a gate was left unsecured, according to Misryoum, remained part of the ongoing investigation.
Meanwhile, the story also highlights the broader challenge of keeping roadways and neighborhood entrances secure, particularly when animals are involved. Whether it’s a gate, fence line, or latch left in the wrong position, a small break in routine can turn into a fast-moving scene.
For Georgetown residents. Jacob’s brief run through town has quickly become the kind of local moment people share because it is both strange and. in the end. resolved without reports of harm.. And for police. it underscores that public safety can include everything from traffic enforcement to handling unexpected emergencies on the fly.
In the bigger picture, stories like this matter because they show how community safety depends on preparedness and follow-through, even when the incident looks like it belongs in a backyard anecdote rather than a patrol log.