Jack Davis is a freelance writer who joined the Western Journal in July 2015 and recorded the campaign in which President Donald Trump was elected. Photos on the Whitfield County Fire Department’s Facebook page show that the logs were cut through the window and guided through the vehicle to the tailgate. The accident was caused by the SUV driver, Whitfield County Fire Marshal Edward O’Brien told CNN. Although the fire department claimed the man’s injuries were minor, comments on the Facebook post indicated that he needed an operation to repair the damage caused by the accident. Although the accident was caused by the fact that the driver couldn’t see where he was going, the fact that he was leaning down at the moment of impact also saved him, according to the fire marshal. Whitfield County Fire Department photos show logs being driven from the front of Nissan Xterra to the rear hatch. Since then, he has written extensively for The Western Journal on the Trump, as well as on foreign policy and military issues. Other signs indicated that the driver dropped his coffee and picked it up when the accident occurred. He said firefighters used chainsaws to cut 30 to 40 logs before they could start releasing the driver from the broken vehicle. Once the hacking was done, the firefighters didn’t take more than 15 minutes to release the driver, O’Brien said. But what was unexpected in an accident in Georgia earlier this month was that the SUV driver who crashed into a wooden truck fled alive. The driver apparently took his eyes off the road for a while when he “leaned into the truck to pick up a fallen object,” O’Brien said. When a truck loaded with wood crashes into a vehicle’s windshield, the result is what you would expect: broken glass and a lot of destruction. While bending over to recover the fallen object, the SUV was thrown into the back of the log truck,” said Mr. O’Brien.