The footage has now been watched tens of millions of times. It still looks fake on first viewing. Then you watch it again and the physics make a horrible kind of sense.
Ramón Ferrer, a entrepreneur born in Cuba, was moving slowly through the car park of a Crunch Fitness shopping centre in Lake Nona, looking for a space. The Huracán is doing what Huracáns do in car parks: barely moving, nose low, essentially a wedge of carbon and aluminium drifting at walking pace. Then a lifted Chevrolet Silverado enters the frame moving faster than the setting calls for. There is no meaningful correction. No evidence of hard braking. The truck rides up over the front end of the Lamborghini, shattered the windshield, gouged the hood, and came to rest with several tons of American pickup sitting on top of a six figure Italian supercar.
The Silverado's driver got out, put her hands on her head, and stared at what she had done.
A witness at the scene estimated she was around 4ft 11in to 5ft tall. The hood of the Silverado was above her line of sight before she got behind the wheel. That detail matters more than it first appears.
What Ferrer said afterward
The man who was inside the Lamborghini when it happened took to Instagram to say this:
"Today I was born again. Thank you God for another day and another chance. Material things don't matter to me — my health is the main thing. Nothing stops us, there is much more to grow."
That is a genuinely remarkable response to watching a three ton truck park itself on your dream car while you were sitting in it. Ferrer called it his dream car. He had owned it for five months.
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How this is physically possible
The geometry that makes this incident possible is not a Florida quirk. It is an engineering reality that exists in car parks across every state and increasingly across the UK and Europe too.
A Lamborghini Huracán sits extremely low to the ground. Its roofline barely clears the average letterbox. A heavily lifted full size Silverado sits so high that the area directly in front of the truck can effectively disappear below the driver's forward sightline. Put those two vehicles in the same car park and you have a situation where a object at pedestrian height and an elevated truck cab might coexist with the truck driver having no useful forward view of what is directly ahead.
A June 2025 study from the European Federation for Transport and Environment found that the average hood height of new cars has risen by half a centimetre every year since 2010, reaching roughly 83.8cm in 2024. The trend is sharper in the United States. The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety reports that the average American passenger vehicle has grown roughly four inches wider, ten inches longer, eight inches taller and a thousand pounds heavier over the past three decades. A lift kit on top of a already tall, full size pickup pushes the geometry past the point of safe forward visibility... and into territory where an entire Lamborghini disappears into the truck's blind zone.
Carscoops noted that crash compatibility... the way two vehicles match up in a collision based on height and mass... is the technical framework for understanding exactly this kind of incident. The Silverado did not defeat any safety system. The geometry simply allowed it to climb rather than collide.
What the insurance situation looks like
A new Lamborghini Huracán starts at around $250,000. Florida's mandatory minimum for property damage liability cover is $10,000. Even expanded policies typically top out at $50,000 to $100,000. Anything beyond the policy ceiling falls to the driver deemed at fault personally, and a judgment of that size can follow someone for years.
The Huracán's aluminium and carbon monocoque structure does not tolerate several tons of truck grinding across it. Moneywise reports that for exotic vehicles like this, repair costs routinely hit 50 to 75 percent of the car's value before structural damage is even factored in. A single carbon fibre hood replacement on a comparable supercar runs around $15,000. The insurance company handling the Silverado's policy is going to have a very difficult few months.
The wider conversation
Lifted trucks are sold as lifestyle vehicles. The advertising shows them on mountain trails, fording rivers, conquering terrain that almost no owner will ever encounter. They then park at strip malls, shopping centres and gym car parks next to cars their drivers literally cannot see.
Most of the time this is fine. Occasionally it looks like this.
The comments sections on every platform carrying this footage are running the same conversation: should trucks this tall be legal in environments shared with pedestrians and low vehicles? Florida has no state restriction on lift height beyond federal safety standards, and those standards were not written with a Huracán in mind.
Ferrer will recover. The Lamborghini almost certainly will not. And somewhere in Florida, the woman who drove over it is waiting to find out what $250,000 of property damage liability looks like when your policy only covers a fraction of it.
Sources:
- Carscoops — Florida Woman Drove Her Lifted Truck Over A Lamborghini And Didn't Even Notice
- Moneywise — Florida Woman's lifted Silverado rolled over a $250K Lamborghini in Crunch Fitness parking lot
- MotorBiscuit — Dashcam Shows Lifted Chevy Silverado HD Climb Onto a Lamborghini Huracan in Florida Parking Lot
- TopSpeed — Lifted Chevy Mounts $340,000 Lamborghini In Parking Lot Accident