Dundas road rage attack: Tradie and driver exchange blows outside St Patrick’s Marist College on Kissing Point Road
- Road rage incident between tradie and another driver
- The driver was struck numerous times in his head
Wild footage has emerged of a tradie and a driver coming to blows over a road rage incident as nearby onlookers honked their cars and yelled at the pair.
Both of the cars which were involved incident occurred halted the busy Kissing Point road in Dundas, in Sydney‘s west, on Friday afternoon as the two men fought across two of the three lanes.
The video shows both men sizing each other up before the tradie strikes the driver in the face with a punch, which drops him to the ground.
Positioning above the fallen man, the tradie then strikes him half a dozen more times in the head as he laid in the fetal position on the road.
The altercation only ended after the man’s companion exited their red sedan and yelled at the tradie to stop hitting the man.
As he was leaving the altercation, the tradie grabs an item off the back of the man’s car and throws it at him before entering his white ute and driving away.
The man who recorded the incident, Jordan, was working a nearby worksite when the brawl broke out to his shock.
He can be heard saying ‘f**k … f**k him up’ as he watched on.
‘He (the tradie) just started hitting him, kicking him and he fell to the ground … and he just got him, started laying into him,’ Jordan told 7News.
‘(The man) couldn’t get up, he was stumbling around and his misses had to drag him to the car.’
It is unclear what started the incident, as no official report has been made to police on what occurred.
Police are aware of the incident and are looking into what occurred prior.
Wild footage has emerged of a road rage incident evolving into a brawl on the busy Kissing Point road in Dundas, in Sydney’s west between a tradie and another driver (pictured)
It is unsure what sparked the incident, however the tradie landed half a dozen punches on the mans head after he fell over and as lying in a protective fetal position