A Black woman in Florida is receiving racist comments online after she was involved in a car accident and then attacked a cameraman who was filming the situation.
It was alleged that the woman was parked in a handicap spot and then backed into another car, hitting it. At the beginning of the video, she could be seen talking on the phone and saying that the other driver had claimed the vehicle now had a dent and that she was responsible for the damage. Hearing this, the other driver insisted that she did in fact hit the car.
“There is no dent in her car,” the woman then told the person she was speaking to on the phone. At that point, the cameraman moved closer and began filming the other vehicle to show the damage. Several scratches could be seen on the front of the car.
While still on the phone, the woman approached the other driver and began knocking on her window. “She’s on the phone with the police for a scratch,” she told the person she was speaking to.
She then turned toward the cameraman and told him, “stop [expletive] recording me.” The situation escalated as she appeared to strike him with her hand while saying, “I’ma [expletive] slap you. Don’t [expletive] record me.”
The situation continued as the woman continued yelling and telling the cameraman not to record her. The cameraman’s wife could be heard reacting in shock, saying, “She hit my husband.” After this, the woman returned to her car, which led the wife to add, “She just hit and run.”
The cameraman then filmed the woman’s license plate as she drove away without waiting for the police to arrive. As the video gained attention online, the woman began receiving a large number of racist comments directed at her due to her behavior in the clip.
Viewers Attack Florida Woman After Hit and Run
The video sparked reactions online. Many viewers criticized the Black woman over how she behaved in the video. “She’s not going to get away with that in Florida. She made a big mistake leaving the scene…,” one person wrote. However, a significant number of comments were also racially charged and offensive. “This FAT Black gurl was wearing a shower bonnet & NO SHOES. Of course she is gonna hit other cars. They shouldn’t be driving. They park by sound. When they hear the crunch, they backed up far enough.”
More people left racist and hostile comments about the incident. One person wrote, “just [expletive] knew it was Florida…[expletive] like that never have no goddamn insurance or any goddamn sense for that matter…part of the reason premiums so goddamn high down here and their male counterparts stealing the [expletive] cars and crashing ‘em.” Another commenter added, “It’s always the people who want to stick their cameras in the faces of McDonalds employees when they feel they’ve been shorted a couple of french fries who become camera shy and think others need permission to record when they’re [expletive] up in public.”
The video sparked a conversation about documenting public incidents to ensure accountability and potential consequences. It also led to broader discussions about how some online reactions shift toward racism instead of focusing solely on the incident itself, regardless of the individuals involved.







