Wichita police arrested a man on Saturday after they say he struck a patrol officer while going in the wrong way on Kellogg.

Officers arrested 58-year-old James D. Johnson on charges of aggravated battery, driving while under the influence, DUI after a second conviction, hit and run, driving the wrong way on a one-way road, and driving on an expired driver’s license.

Police say around 2:15 a.m., officers responded to a wrong-way driver at Kellogg and Maize. They received information that a white Ford F-350 was traveling eastbound in the westbound lanes of traffic.

A responding officer located the vehicle and was struck by Johnson while attempting to avoid a head-on collision. Johnson continued driving and struck the center median before coming to a stop near Kellogg and Meridian.

The involved officer was transported to a hospital with minor injuries and was later treated and released. Johnson was not injured. Both vehicles were towed from the scene.

The case will be presented to the Sedgwick County District Attorney’s Office.

The crash leading to Johnson's arrest was the first of two early Saturday-morning crashes police say involved a patrol vehicle in Wichita. In the second crash, there were no serious injuries after a vehicle hit a patrol car working a different accident.

Police say officers also arrested the driver in this second crash involving a patrol vehicle.

Eyewitness News Monday spoke with victims' advocates who say they hope the recent accidents serve as a wake-up call for the drivers involved.

Jacqueline Cook Green says her life was changed forever by a drunk driver in a 1995 crash. She says the drunk driver left her brother to die.

"My family's life was affected by a drunk driver's choice to drink and drive on more than one occasion, but we didn't make that choice," she says. "The driver in each incident made the choice to drink and get behind the wheel."

Now Cook works to help others in situations like her family's. While an event like an intoxicated driver hitting a police car may seem shocking, those events aren't always the wake-up call they should be.

"It really depends on the individual because people from all walks of life are going to take accountability differently," she says.