(CNN) New footage of the Berlin Christmas market truck attack has been released.
In the video, the truck is seen speeding from the left moments before ramming into the crowded Christmas market.
Moments later, a crowd of people are seen running away from the direction of the public square.
The video was recorded by a local taxi driver's dashboard mounted camera. The driver was nearing a red light close to the market's Kaiser Wilhelm memorial church where he planned to pick up customers leaving the festive stalls.
12 people were killed in the market attack and another 48 injured.
Berlin attack aftermath
The Brandenburg Gate in Berlin is illuminated in the colors of the German flag on Tuesday, December 20, one day after
a truck crashed into a crowded Christmas market there. At least 12 people were killed and 48 injured in what police are investigating as a terrorist attack.
A police officer places a candle at a makeshift memorial in Berlin on December 20.
A woman is illuminated by candles as she cries in Berlin on December 20.
A man prays at a Berlin memorial on December 20.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel lays flowers at the memorial on December 20. She is joined by, from left, Berlin Mayor Michael Muller, Minister of the Interior Thomas de Maiziere and Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier.
Merkel, bottom left, views the scene of the attack.
A woman reacts near the crime scene on December 20.
Mourners gather at the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church near the crash site.
A police officer holds her weapon near the market.
A woman lays flowers at a makeshift memorial across from the market.
A stall worker is comforted in the market area on December 20.
People attend a memorial service at St. Hedwig Cathedral in Berlin on December 20.
A police van drives by Christmas decorations at a Christmas market in Frankfurt, Germany, on December 20. Police presence has been stepped up at Christmas markets across Germany following the attack in Berlin.
Inside the truck, authorities found a Polish man shot dead, police said he was not at the wheel during the attack.
A set of identity papers belonging to 24-year-old Tunisian national Anis Amri -- the suspected driver and mastermind of the attack -- were later found.
Amri was killed in an early-morning shootout in Milan Friday morning, ending an extensive manhunt.