One moment he was telling security that a stripper was going to give him a ride home, and then shortly after he was peeling out of the club's parking lot, swerving down the streets of Burlington.

It was an eventful October night in 2013 for Hamilton man Brock Johnson — one that involved a strip club, "erratic driving," and being chased by police dogs — all capped off with a guilty sentence for impaired driving, according to court documents released earlier this month.

The sentence comes almost two years after the incident in question.

According to court documents in the case, Johnson was 25 years old on the night he was arrested. After he was cut off at the bar at Burlington's Solid Gold Strip Club, he told bouncers that one of the dancers was going to take him home.

But he was waiting for a dancer who would never come. According to testimony from one of the club's bouncers, the woman had already left the club — and had never agreed to drive him home anyway.

He left the club upon hearing that she was gone, and told security he was waiting around for a cab to pick him up.

While waiting, Johnson told the bouncer he was going to get his laptop from his car in the parking lot. That's when he hopped in his car and peeled out of the club's parking lot while clearly behind the wheel, according to witnesses.

A bouncer reported Johnson's identity to the police, and an officer was sent to his house. Not long after the police cruiser arrived, Johnson drove by "very, very, very slowly" and "looked out the front driver's side window at [the officer]."

"His face was almost pressing against the window," the officer testified.

The cop followed Johnson, who was "driving erratically" through Burlington before stopping his car at a townhouse complex and running away. Numerous officers were called to the scene and chased him down with a police dog before he was arrested.

Tests showed Johnson had a blood concentration almost double the legal limit of Ontario. He was charged with impaired driving.

At the conclusion of the trial, Justice Lesley Baldwin said the evidence in the case against Johnson was "overwhelming."

Johnson, now 27, surrendered his license to the court and had a one-year driving ban imposed upon him. The rest of the sentence is yet to be decided.