The wife of an injured Wichita Police Office accuses a Wichita car dealership of playing a role in what happened to her husband.

Brian Arterburn's wife is suing Eddy's Chevrolet Cadillac. New court papers show that she's asking the court to expand the lawsuit to include Brandon Steven, Rodney Steven and Moxie Motors LLC, one of their companies.

It also makes new allegations about the black 2016 Chevy Tahoe Justin Terrazas used to run over Officer Arterburn on February 7, 2017.

Court documents say on December 17, 2016, an employee at Eddy's Chevrolet Cadillac noticed the black Tahoe wasn't on the property and a set of keys were missing. She informed the general manager about the missing vehicle and spare key. He instructed her to ask the owner of the automobile insurance agency located at the dealership. Court documents identify him as a member of the Steven family, J.S. The employee said J.S. told her he did not know where the Tahoe was. Then she said the general manager told her not to report the vehicle as stolen.

For the next seven weeks, the lawsuit says the dealership did not report the vehicle stolen or use the OnStar option to locate it.

The lawsuit states the Tahoe was reported stolen on February 7, 2017, the same day Arterburn was hit, but only after police traced the SUV back to Eddy's Chevrolet Cadillac while surveilling a residence.

In December 2018, a call log was obtained for the Tahoe's infotainment system. A module was extracted from the vehicle and analyzed. It showed more than 200 calls. Several were placed to and from personnel at Eddy's Chevrolet Cadillac including upper-level management. Phone numbers, contact names, dates and times were all included. The calls spanned from Jan. 4 to Feb. 1, 2017. The lawsuit does say the dealership testified under oath that it doesn't know who had the vehicle at the time.

The lawsuit says Eddy's Chevrolet Cadillac and the Steven brothers were negligent and offers two reasons for the facts they claim. One is that the vehicle was stolen and the dealership didn't do anything about it. The other is that someone at the dealership gave Terrazas the vehicle with the consent of management.

On January 31, 2017, during the seven weeks, Eddy's was unable to account for the whereabouts of the Tahoe, Terrazas posted a photo to Facebook showing him in a black Chevy Tahoe. Two women who are close to Terrazas both testified that he told them the Tahoe was not stolen despite the dealership tag.

Claudale Arterburn is asking for $75,000 in damages including loss of companionship, marital care, attention, advise and counsel. She and Brian had only been married for a few weeks before he was critically hurt. She is also demanding a jury trial in the case.