26 Jun 2026, Fri

Waymo Robotaxi Seen Near Violent Four-Car Crash, Drives Away Calmly as Internet Erupts Over What Really Happened

A self-driving car rolling away from a messy crash scene sounds like something out of a bad sci-fi plot. Except this one is real, and it is blowing up across the internet for all the wrong reasons. A viral TikTok video shows a Waymo robotaxi sitting near what looks like a four-car pileup, pausing briefly, then signaling and calmly driving off. That alone was enough to set people off.

And it didn’t take long. The clip spread fast, pulling in outrage, speculation, and a whole lot of finger-pointing. Some viewers jumped straight to blaming the autonomous vehicle, calling for Waymo to be pulled off public roads entirely. Others weren’t so sure. Because once you actually look at what’s in the video, things don’t line up as cleanly as people want them to.

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The footage, originally posted by a user named LASHY BILLS, shows a chaotic scene at an intersection. A white Ford F-150 sits with its hood crushed in hard, like it took a direct hit. Nearby, a woman circles her damaged car, already on the phone, likely dealing with insurance before the dust even settles. The vehicles appear stopped at a crosswalk and they are facing opposite directions, which suggests the crash involved traffic moving in multiple lanes.

That’s where things start to get strange.

Right in the middle of all this is the Waymo robotaxi. It doesn’t look totaled. It doesn’t even look heavily damaged. There are a few dents on the rear, sure, but nothing close to what you would expect from a vehicle that supposedly triggered a multi-car collision. Then, after a brief pause, it flips on its turn signal and pulls away like it just finished a routine stop.

Here’s the part that matters. The video never actually shows the crash happening. It shows the aftermath. It shows damaged cars. It shows the Waymo leaving. What it does not show is the Waymo causing anything.

That hasn’t stopped the internet from making up its mind.

A big chunk of the reaction has been immediate and aggressive. People see a robotaxi near wrecked vehicles and assume the worst. But another group has been asking a pretty basic question that nobody seems able to answer yet. If that Waymo really caused a four-car pileup strong enough to crush a truck’s hood, why does it look mostly fine?

And that question changes everything.

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Because the physics don’t quite add up. A crash involving multiple vehicles across different lanes should leave more than just light rear-end damage on the car that started it. Some viewers think the Waymo may have simply been caught in the middle of something that was already unfolding. Others suggest it might have been trying to move out of the way to avoid making things worse.

And that’s where it gets complicated.

Waymo vehicles are not blind. They are packed with sensors, cameras, and recording systems that track everything happening around them. If this robotaxi was involved in a collision, there is data that shows exactly what happened. So far, that information has not been released. And while that silence is frustrating, it also isn’t proof of anything on its own.

Still, timing matters here. Public trust in autonomous vehicles is shaky, and moments like this don’t help. A short clip without context spreads faster than any official explanation ever will. By the time details come out, most people have already decided what they think happened.

Some observers are even questioning whether the video is being interpreted correctly at all. Not because it’s fake, but because it’s incomplete. A few seconds of footage doesn’t tell the full story of a crash, especially one involving multiple vehicles from different directions. It leaves gaps, and people tend to fill those gaps with whatever they already believe.

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At the same time, Waymo isn’t exactly operating with a spotless reputation lately. There have been several incidents that keep the company under a microscope. Earlier this year, one of its vehicles struck a child near a school in Santa Monica, triggering a federal investigation. Around that same time, another Waymo vehicle operating in manual mode hit parked cars in a residential area.

Go back a bit further and there was a recall involving more than a thousand vehicles due to software issues that could lead to minor collisions. Between 2021 and late 2025, there were over a thousand reported incidents involving Waymo vehicles, including injuries and a small number of fatalities. Not all of those were caused by the autonomous system, but the numbers are enough to keep critics paying attention.

But here’s where things flip again.

The broader safety data actually paints a very different picture. Studies comparing Waymo vehicles to human drivers show significantly fewer serious crashes, fewer injury-related incidents, and fewer situations involving airbag deployment. Some reports suggest reductions in serious injury crashes by as much as 90 percent.

That doesn’t mean these vehicles are perfect. Far from it. But it does mean the reality is more complicated than a single viral video suggests.

And that’s the real takeaway here.

This situation is less about one crash and more about how quickly perception can spiral without solid information. A robotaxi near a wreck becomes a villain in seconds, even when the evidence isn’t clear. Meanwhile, the actual answer sits somewhere behind data logs and investigations that take time to unfold.

Until that information comes out, nobody really knows what happened in that intersection.

But one thing is clear. In the current climate, it doesn’t take much to turn a moment of uncertainty into a full-blown controversy. And for companies like Waymo, that gap between what people see and what actually happened might be the toughest road they have to navigate.

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By Eve Nowell

Eve Nowell is a writer at The Auto Wire, where she covers industry news, new vehicle launches, and the bigger shifts changing how we get around. Her thing is taking the complicated stuff—manufacturer strategy, new regulations, the latest tech—and making it actually make sense. She's especially curious about how innovation, what buyers want, and changing policy all collide to shape what automakers put on the road next. She reports with an eye for detail and a knack for writing coverage that works whether you're a hardcore enthusiast or just someone trying to figure out their next car. You'll find her writing about industry news, new vehicle announcements, market trends and manufacturer strategy, EV tech, and the policy and regulation side of the business.