
A routine run to a Lake Nona shopping center turned into viral-video fodder this week when a lifted pickup truck rolled up and over a Lamborghini Huracan in the parking lot. The supercar was left with a shattered windshield and deep gouges across its hood, but the owner walked away without injuries. Shoppers watched as the battered Lamborghini was eventually hoisted onto a tow truck and hauled off to a repair shop.
What the video shows
Security footage captures a heavily lifted Chevrolet Silverado pulling forward and climbing straight over the Huracan's nose, its tires ending up on the Lamborghini's roof before the driver steps out looking stunned, according to FOX 35 Orlando. The Huracan's owner told reporters he had only recently gotten the car and "had not driven it much." Photos taken after the crash show a spiderwebbed windshield and deep scratches carved into the hood.
Owner's reaction
The owner, identified in social media posts as Ramon Ferrer, shared a video of the aftermath and wrote that he was simply grateful to be okay, posting "Thank you God for another day and another chance," as reported by GM Authority. Outlets that picked up his posts noted that he appeared remarkably calm in the clips and photos. Additional video shows a tow truck and crane carefully disentangling the pickup and the supercar so both vehicles could be removed, per Dexerto.
Why lifted trucks matter
The incident has poured fresh gas on a simmering debate about the safety of heavily lifted pickups and the huge blind spots they can create directly in front of the vehicle. As Carscoops points out, high hood lines and oversized tires cut into forward visibility and can turn a brief lapse in attention into a very expensive mistake. For many viewers, the clip underlines that the real danger is not just to low-slung sports cars that disappear from a truck's sightline.
Insurance and liability
Questions about who pays for what are already swirling. Insurance disputes can get messy when a vehicle has been heavily modified, and some commenters have warned that insurers might take a hard look at claims tied to aftermarket lift kits, according to Dexerto. Whether the Huracan is repairable or written off as a total loss will depend on any structural damage beneath the cosmetic carnage, and repair bills for exotic cars can climb into six-figure territory fast. For now, the owner appears focused on getting the car assessed and staying thankful that no one was hurt.
What's next
So far, there are no public reports of criminal charges in connection with the crash, and the Lamborghini remains in a shop awaiting repairs, the station reports, per FOX 35 Orlando. Even so, the viral clip has already sparked local chatter about whether Florida needs stricter oversight or clearer rules when it comes to extreme vehicle modifications in everyday traffic.









