Sweet Karma’s about to visit this scumbag lady for fleeing the scene after reversing into someone’s car.

Olmstead County-area driver and Redditor /u/intelligent_Wheel643 shared headshaking dashcam footage from the parking lot of this mattress store from earlier last week (June 25, 2026) to the /r/IdiotsInCars subreddit showing a lady reversing into his car and, after running, turning it into a hit-and-run, without realizing a rear dashcam was running the entire time.

Check out the lady’s blunder turned hit-and-run below with the original Reddit thread linked here.

The incident happened in the parking lot of Sleep Number next to Aldi between Circle and Commerce Dr. (Exact location on Google Maps linked here.)

As the dashcam shows, OP is away from his ride, parked front bumper-first in the parking lot of this Sleep Number.

Unbeknownst to others, he has a front and rear dashcam running.

Suddenly, a lady driving a silver Nissan Altima (9RX472) can be seen reversing at an angle and side-swiping the rear of OP’s car.

9RX472

She knows what she did because she comes out, looks at the damage, and leaves, turning it into a hit-and-run.

However, with a rear dashcam running, OP is getting his justice as he’s already submitted police and insurance reports.

“The cop was super chill, he laughed and was just in awe at how the video caught everything in such detail. Afterwards, he asked me to pop the hood, checked out the car, and was taking pictures of it lol,” OP clarified in the comments.

“Waiting for the police to get back to me with info so I can file with her insurance. This was recommended to me by my insurance.”

“She did a good job at changing a small repair bill into a misdemeanor,” one of the top comments from /u/letsfastescape reads.

In Minnesota, backing into someone and leaving the scene is generally treated as a property-damage hit-and-run misdemeanor if nobody was hurt. Penalties can be up to 90 days in jail and/or up to a $1,000 fine, and insurers may assign 4 insurance points for leaving the scene, which can affect premiums. (recordinglaw.com)

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