Wild moment road rage tradie threatens motorist with an AXE

Terrifying footage has emerged of a man threatening a motorist with a large pick axe.

Confronting video taken by another driver showed the man, who was wearing an orange hi-vis shirt and dark pants, wielding the rusty brown pick axe at an intersection in Albert Park, in Melbourne’s south, on Saturday. 

He then began to speak aggressively to the driver as he brandished the tool. 

Terrifying video footage has captured the moment a tradie (pictured) threatened a motorist with a pick axe at an intersection on Queens Road in Albert Park, Melbourne, on Saturday

Moments later the man tapped the axe on the roof of the vehicle and then tapped it against the window on the driver’s side of the vehicle. 

He continued his tirade at the motorist by pointing and yelling at the driver. 

Radio presenter Jacqui Felgate expressed her outrage over the incident on 3AW on Tuesday afternoon. 

She said the driver in the hi-vis had overtaken another driver before he confronted the motorist with the pick axe. 

‘Imagine if there were children in the back seat of that car,’ she said. 

‘I think it’s scary and threatening enough as an adult let alone if kids witnessed the person behaving this way.’

Glenn Weir, Assistant Commissioner of Road Policing at Victoria Police, told the program, that officers had been made aware of the incident. 

The man was seen pointing his finger (pictured) and yelling at the driver of the vehicle, during the shocking roadside confrontation

The man was seen pointing his finger (pictured) and yelling at the driver of the vehicle, during the shocking roadside confrontation

‘We’ve spoken to the motorist who was the victim of that [incident] who doesn’t want to take any action,’ Commissioner Weir said. 

‘The behaviour is completely unacceptable, I don’t know what world that guy lives in where he thinks that’s acceptable behaviour.’

He said police would continue to make inquiries with the motorist and urged drivers who witness similar incidents to contact police in the first instance instead of uploading videos to social media. 

A spokeswoman from Victoria Police told Daily Mail Australia that police did not receive a report of the incident.  

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