This driver at Stephanie & Arroyo Grande doesn’t wait for their turn, almost causes a t-bone accident.
Clark County-area driver and Redditor /u/SentientPaint shared headshaking dashcam footage from earlier in February (Feb 11, 2026) to the /r/IdiotsInCars subreddit showing a driver coming up to this 4-way stop and completely ignoring the rules of the road on their way to coming within inches of t-boning another driver.
Check out the dashcam footage embedded below with the original Reddit thread linked here.
The incident happened at the intersection of S Stephanie St. and S Arroyo Grande Blvd (Exact location on Google Maps linked here.)
As the dashcam shows, OP is driving southbound on Stephanie St when they come up to the aforementioned intersection.
To his left, a driver in a white Ford F-150 passes him and comes up to the limit line.
At almost the same, if not the same time, a driver in a silver Toyota Tacoma to that driver’s right on Arroyo Grande comes to a stop, too.
4-way stop rules dictate that, if drivers come up to a 4-way stop at the same time, the driver to the right goes first.
The driver in the Ford F-150 doesn’t do that and goes at the same time as the Tacoma driver.
That F-150 driver would’ve t-boned the Tacoma if OP hadn’t honked, alerting the driver to their impending disastrous mistake.
Thankfully, the F-150 driver brakes in time, avoiding what would’ve been one expensive and possibly injurious collision.
“He had better be paying attention as he was in the wrong,” the top comment from /u/StevenG2757 reads.
“Who put’s 4 way stops at intersections with multiple lanes? Nevada does thank you very much.” /u/Joe18067 observed.
“They were never gonna let that guy go unless he did what he did. People are so selfish these days. Glad he didn’t get robbed by that moron,” /u/xADeadCatx added.
In Nevada, failing to properly yield at a 4‑way stop or similar right‑of‑way violation is treated as a failure to yield right‑of‑way traffic offense, typically resulting in a fine of around $300 + court costs and 4 demerit points on your driving record. (Shouse Law Group)
Accumulating 12+ points in one year can lead to a six‑month license suspension under Nevada’s demerit point system. (dmv.nv.gov)

