*Two Vids - One; Raw Dashcam, the other from the local news*A West Seattle man survived an accident that nearly claimed his life only to learn police were apparently mocking him in the moments after it."They say he flew up in the air and landed on his noggin," one officer is heard saying on dashcam video."Hey, that ain't my problem," responds a second officer."That's why you drive a car!" the first one remarks."Yeah, don't try to jog to work, you dumb (expletive)," said the other.The remarks followed an accident in which a semi truck driver hit a jogger on the east end of the West Seattle low bridge on Oct. 24.The accident took place during the extended closure of the Alaskan Way Viaduct, when the state Department of Transportation was urging commuters to bike, walk, or take a ferry to work in order to avoid a traffic gridlock."I was near-death and this is the best I can get out of this cop? And all he did was walk around with a chip on his shoulder," said Tim Nelson, the jogger who was hit by the semi. "The city and the state had begged all of us - particularly from West Seattle - not to drive if we could help it. For some reason, I did what they asked and that's what I got."Nelson, who broke his back, cracked six ribs, and fractured his skull, hired an attorney after the accident to investigate who was at fault. The attorney dug up the dashcam video, which Nelson believes shows Seattle police acting in ways that appear to be less than professional.In the video, two officers are overheard talking about the truck driver involved in the crash. They appear to be mocking his heavy accent."'I don't know. It uh, hit da truck! I don't know,'" says the first officer, apparently imitating the driver's accent."I'm sorry?" asks the second."'I don't know. It hit da truck,'" the first officer repeats."He goes, 'What happen now? I get ticket?'" says the second officer, laughing."I was pissed," Nelson said, referring to the first time he watched the tape. "It's like, we pay their salaries and I understand they have stressful jobs, but this cop was not under any duress. It was quite obvious from the tone of his voice. He was joking and making remarks about the truck driver's accent, his foreign accent."The footage is approximately 15 minutes in length, but the exchange between the two officers lasts less than a minute. It is unclear whether this is the case because their microphones were turned off the rest of the time, or if the audio only recorded when the officers were inside their car.Nelson says he isn't seeking financial gain from the incident, but rather an apology from the responding officer, who is identified in the police report as Doug Jorgensen, or from the city. Nelson believes his incident is especially disturbing in light of last week's announcement of the results of a 10-month federal investigation, which found that SPD engages in discriminatory policing and often "engages in a pattern of unnecessary and excessive force," among other things."When I think about things like this it really bothers me - kind of stirs the hornet's nest. I mean, when is it ever going to end?" Nelson asked.Seattle police spokesman Det. Jeff Kappel said he believed Nelson's case is currently part of an investigation by the department's Office of Professional Accountability, and therefore he could not comment.