
‘Attacks every 8 minutes': Uber upped passenger safety features but sexual assault reports keep flooding in
Her mind blurred with confusion and her body covered in bruises, she went to the hospital and was given a sexual assault examination, according to a civil lawsuit against Uber and the driver, seen by The Independent.
Authorities charged the driver, Timothy Alexander Greene, in June 2021. A jury convicted him of sexual battery two years later, court records show, and he is serving a 10-year prison sentence.
The woman's horrifying assault in a ride-share vehicle is far from an isolated incident.
'Especially with solo female passengers, this is a huge problem in the industry,' Jim Mitchell, one of the attorneys representing the Oklahoma woman, told The Independent.
'Safety is a core value at Uber, and we have invested billions of dollars and countless hours to reduce safety incidents during trips, particularly when it comes to sexual misconduct and assault,' the company said in a statement on its website.
Across the country, passengers have shared claims of misconduct that took place in Uber rides. In Utah, a woman on her way home was subjected to unwanted touching. In California, a driver touched himself as a female passenger vomited. In Texas, a 20-minute ride turned into a five-hour ordeal and an alleged rape at a motel.
While Uber touts its safety record — and the company has implemented a string of features to protect passengers and drivers since its inception — allegations detailed in thousands of legal cases, internal company documents, and stories on social media underscore that staying safe in ride-shares is still an issue.
Uber received reports of sexual misconduct every eight minutes from U.S. riders from 2017 through 2022, documents first reported by The New York Times revealed this week. Over six years, that totaled more than 400,000 Uber trips in the U.S. resulting in reports of sexual assault and sexual misconduct, according to the report.
Uber's 2022 safety report disclosed 12,522 sexual assault and misconduct reports over the same time period. The tech company addressed the large discrepancy in a statement posted on the company website Wednesday after the Times published its report.
The 'vast majority' of the hundreds of thousands of misconduct reports were 'less serious and non-physical in nature,' like flirting or staring, Hannah Nilles, Uber's Head of Safety for the Americas, wrote.
Most of these 400,000-plus reports have not been subjected to a 'rigorous' process that vets allegations and weeds out false reports made 'with the goal of getting a refund,' Nilles continued. Uber claims that 99.99 percent of trips end without any issue. Roughly 0.006 percent of the 6.3 billion trips in the U.S. in the six-year span ended with a sexual misconduct or assault report, according to Nilles. The most serious reports accounted for 0.00002 percent — or 1 in 5 million trips — she said.
The vast majority of sexual misconduct reports between 2017-2022 were made by female drivers or riders. Women represented 89 percent of survivors, according to the company's 2022 safety report.Uber has not released a safety report since. The Independent has asked the company why this is the case.
Uber identified other patterns in the sexual assault report data, according to internal documents seen by the Times. Incidents tended to occur late at night and on weekends with pick-ups near bars.
The company has implemented a series of safety measures over the past several years.
'RideCheck' uses GPS tracking to detect whether the ride stays on course, pinging drivers and riders to ensure they're safe. There's also a 'Follow My Ride' feature that allows riders to share their trips so loved ones can track. But Uber acknowledges the features' limitations.
'No single safety feature or policy is going to prevent unpredictable incidents from happening on Uber, or in our world,' Nilles told the Times.
In one case, what should have been a 20-minute trip became a harrowing five-hour ordeal that culminated in an alleged rape, The Times reported.
A woman in Houston requested an Uber in December 2023. The driver picked her up at 8.53 p.m. at an apartment complex to take her to a house 22 minutes away. But the driver took a detour to a gas station around 9.10 p.m., the records show. That's when Uber sent a ping to check in on the woman, who didn't respond.
By 9.29 p.m., the car continued to veer off the requested course and instead stopped at a motel. The company notified the woman again, and again, it went unanswered. Minutes later, Uber tried to get in touch with her with a robocall, to which she also didn't respond.
The driver didn't mark the trip as complete until 2.01 a.m. Three hours later, the woman called Uber, claiming that she had been intoxicated and woke up in a motel with the driver, who had raped her, the Times reported.
Uber banned the driver immediately after the alleged attack.
An investigation into him the following month revealed a 'a concerning fact pattern' that included two previous accusations of sexual misconduct for inappropriate comments.
The three missed contact attempts served as a potential signal that something could have gone wrong in the trip, the documents said. The report asked: 'Are our actions (or lack of actions) defensible?'
In Oklahoma, when charges were brought against Uber driver Greene in 2021, the State Bureau of Investigation warned that there may be other survivors. Authorities had 'reason to believe other women could also have been assaulted by the ride-share driver.'
It appears that investigators found another survivor. Last June, Oklahoma County District Attorney's Office brought another charge against Greene, accusing him of raping a woman in July 2019 while he was driving for Lyft, court records show. He has pleaded not guilty and is next due in court on August 20. An attorney for Greene declined to comment on the ongoing cases.
The woman filed a police report and contacted Lyft to report the alleged incident. Greene was booted from the platform, the 2021 civil suit says.
Greene then allegedly engaged in 'platform hopping,' jumping over to Uber after being deactivated from Lyft, said Mitchell, who also represents the woman.
In March 2021, Lyft and Uber launched the Industry Sharing Safety Program which allows both companies to share information about drivers who were banned from the other's platform for sexual or physical assaults.
"Any act of violence or assault has no place in the Lyft community or our society. When an incident is reported to us, our trained team takes immediate action to investigate, provides our support to the victim, and works with law enforcement on any investigation. With regard to the Oklahoma case, we were made aware of the allegations against the driver in June of 2019, and we immediately and permanently banned him from ever driving on the Lyft platform again. At that time we also provided support to the rider, and assisted law enforcement with their investigation,' a Lyft spokesperson told The Independent.
Since Uber issued its first safety report for 2017 and 2018, the rate of reported sexual assaults has declined 44 percent, according to the company's latest report.
Meanwhile, hundreds of plaintiffs across 29 states have joined a class action lawsuit against the ride-share giant.
More than 2,435 cases are pending in the multidistrict litigation against Uber for activity described in the Times article, lead attorneys Rachel Abrams, Sarah London, and Roopal Luhana told The Independent in a statement. There are an additional 621 cases brought in California under a related proceeding.
'We look forward to litigating these claims in Court on behalf of the brave survivors who have come forward to seek justice from a company that has put profits over safety,' the attorneys said. The cases are scheduled to go to trial in December.
Lyft, Uber's ride-share rival, also disclosed thousands of sexual misconduct reports from 2017 through 2022. In that period, there were 6,809 reports, accounting for 0.0002 percent of rides, according to Lyft's 2022 safety report.
On social media, women have also been sharing their disturbing stories.
One TikToker, xknowlsallpodcast, alleged she was sexually assaulted in 2016 in San Francisco. Intoxicated, she got in an Uber and immediately started feeling sick. She threw up a little on the car's central console. The driver then stopped the car and asked what she was doing, she recalled.
The rider then opened the door and continued to vomit. The driver walked around to her side of the car. He then took off his pants and started touching himself, she said. She then ran out of the car, hid behind a nearby house, and called another Uber.
Later, she looked at her Uber receipts to find that her second ride picked her up far from where she wanted to go. She had ordered a car to take her from a holiday party in downtown San Francisco to her home in the northern part of the city. Instead, she said, her receipts showed that she was south, near the airport.
'When I look at my Uber receipts, the first car that was supposed to take me downtown to my house was cancelled,' the woman said in the video. 'My theory is this driver saw me, he saw how intoxicated I was, he saw an opportunity to hurt me, and he cancelled the ride when I got into his car.'
When she reported the incident to Uber, the company told her that she got into the wrong car that night, the TikToker recalled. She also said that this was a possibility.
Since then, she said she shares her rides with her friends and 'never, ever, ever get into a car by myself intoxicated like that.' The Independent has asked Uber about the alleged incident but received no response.
In Utah, a Facebook user said she called an Uber to take her home in August 2021. The driver reached into the backseat where she was sitting and started 'repeatedly touching and rubbing' her leg, despite her pleas for him to stop, she wrote in a social media post.
When she tried to exit, he locked the door, she claimed. She eventually got to her destination after telling him that family members were expecting her. The woman contacted Uber about the incident, she said, and urged other riders to share their locations when using a ride-share.
The driver was banned from the platform, Uber told The Independent.
Safety issues extend to female drivers as well. And due to the media attention around ride-share assaults, attracting female drivers has become a challenge.
'Safety has ranked as one of the top reasons for prospective female drivers to not join Uber, and for current female drivers to not drive during certain hours of the day,' an internal document, seen by the Times, stated.
Uber rolled out an experimental program that matched female riders with female drivers in Saudi Arabia in 2019 and found an 'overwhelmingly positive response,' the company said. It has since replicated the feature in 40 countries.
The company had planned to launch the same program in the U.S. in November, but Donald Trump's election victory prompted executives to rethink the timing of the rollout. 'This is not the right environment to launch, and we want to take a beat to assess our timing,' an internal document, reported by The Times, stated. The Independent has asked Uber about the decision.
Last month, Uber announced that the 'Women Preferences' option for riders and drivers will become available in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Detroit starting 'in the next few weeks.' Lyft rolled out a similar program — 'Women + Connect' — last September, giving women and nonbinary riders and drivers the option to be paired. The company has since expanded the program nationwide.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
26 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Mom sparks elementary school lockdown after sending child to class with deadly weapon in her bag
A Florida mother sent her child's school into lockdown after she placed a deadly weapon in her bag. Sierra Nichole Bronner, 39, of Middleburg, was arrested on felony charges after her daughter went to school with a gun in her backpack on Wednesday. She had allegedly packed the weapon in the student's backpack to have her give the gun back to her father, who lives separately, before the school day, but the child forgot. When the girl opened their backpack while at Coopergate Elementary School, she allegedly discovered the gun and informed a teacher, prompting a modified lockdown, Clay County Sheriff Michelle Cook said. Students were still allowed to continue with class, but were not allowed to leave or enter school grounds until police completed their work. The father, who was not identified, had driven the girl to school and was unaware the child had the weapon in their bag. Bronner was charged with child neglect and giving a firearm to a minor and taken to the Clay County Jail. Cook advised parents to check children's backpacks before bringing them to school so they are aware of the contents. 'It's crucial that parents know what their children are bringing to school before they leave home,' Cook said in a statement. 'In this specific case, this was a poor decision and could've ended in tragedy.' Daily Mail has reached out to Bronner for comment. It comes after a North Carolina mother was arrested after firing two shots in the air at a back-to-school event to break up a fight between her son and another boy. Cherez Montique Davis, 34, of Charlotte, was arrested on Saturday after allegedly firing at least two rounds into the air from her Taurus G6 while at an event at the CW Williams Community Health Center around 1pm. The shots were fired to break up a fight between her son and another boy, according to an affidavit viewed by Daily Mail. Another adult intervened and that is when Davis pulled the gun out of her backpack and fired it before placing the weapon back inside and walking away, the filings say. No one was injured, but the sound of gunshots made the crowd of 100 scatter in fear, the affidavit said. She was charged with going armed to the terror of the people and carrying a concealed weapon. Both are misdemeanors.


The Guardian
33 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Israeli government official arrested in Nevada in internet crimes against children sting
An Israeli government cybersecurity official was reportedly arrested recently by Las Vegas police and other authorities in Nevada who were conducting an undercover investigation aimed at online users seeking to sexually prey on children. Tom Artiom Alexandrovich, 38, faces felony charges of luring a child with a computer for a sex act, alongside several other suspects who were apprehended during the two-week sting operation, the Las Vegas metropolitan police department said in a statement published on Friday. He has since evidently been released from custody and returned to Israel. As first reported by the news site Mediaite, a publicly posted screenshot of Alexandrovich's page on the LinkedIn professional networking platform described him as the executive director of the Israel Cyber Directorate, an Israeli government agency under the purview of prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office. Other information online attributes the same position to Alexandrovich. The screenshot first reported by Mediaite also showed a post under Alexandrovich's name alluding to his having been in Las Vegas earlier in August for the Black Hat Briefings, a yearly meeting of cybersecurity professionals. 'Two things you can't escape at Black Hat 2025: the relentless buz of generative [artificial intelligence] and the sound of Hebrew … in every corridor,' Alexandrovich wrote in part in an accompanying post. Invoking an abbreviation for large language models and referring to one of Israel's largest cities, the post continued: 'The key takeaway? The future of cybersecurity is being written in code, and it seems a significant part of it is being authored in #TelAviv and powered by LLMs. An exciting time to be in the field!' That LinkedIn page under Alexandrovich's name has since been deleted. The Israeli news outlet Ynet reported on Wednesday that the US had detained 'an employee of the Israel National Cyber Directorate' for interrogation while he was representing his country at a professional conference. That employee then returned to his hotel and flew back to Israel two days later. 'Israeli officials downplayed the incident, saying it carried 'no political implications' and was resolved quickly,' Ynet reported, without naming Alexandrovich or mentioning he had been arrested in connection with a felony charge leveled against him by Nevada law enforcement officials. 'The reasons for the questioning remain unclear but may relate to the employee's conduct.' Mediaite reported that Netanyahu's office issued a statement denying that the employee in question had even been arrested. 'A state employee who traveled to the US for professional matters was questioned by American authorities during his stay,' the prime minister's office said. 'The employee, who does not hold a diplomatic visa, was not arrested and returned to Israel as scheduled.' Nevada's internet crime against children taskforce helmed the operation which resulted in the arrests of Alexandrovich and seven other men in the city of Henderson, which is near Las Vegas. All eight suspects were brought to jail after their arrests, said the statement from the Las Vegas metropolitan police department, which participated in the operation alongside local, state and federal law enforcement officials. Under Nevada law, luring a child with a computer for a sex act can carry between one and 10 years in prison.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
NFL to review Isaiah Bond's sexual assault case after Texas cops declined to charge Browns hopeful
The NFL is reviewing the case of rookie free-agent wide receiver Isaiah Bond after Frisco, Texas police declined to proceed with sexual assault charges against him in April. NFL spokesperson Brian McCarthy told on Friday that Bond's case is currently being reviewed. The league's personal conduct policy does not require criminal charges in order for a player to be punished, so the fact that Bond wasn't charged won't protect him from a possible suspension. Bond has not signed with a team yet, but previously announced his intention to join the Cleveland Browns. ESPN is reporting that Bond will meet the Browns in Cleveland on Saturday night to finalize his deal following the team's preseason game in Philadelphia earlier in the day. 'First and foremost, I want to express my deepest gratitude to the Cleveland Browns for believing in me and allowing me the opportunity to continue my career in the NFL,' Bond said in a statement after charges against him were dropped. 'Football has been my passion since I was six years old, and playing at this level is a blessing I will never take for granted. I understand that playing in the NFL is a privilege, and I'm thankful every day to live my childhood dream. 'I know there have been questions and reports about the recent allegations,' he continued. 'I am grateful for the decision of the prosecutor and the courts not to pursue charges. I will learn from this experience as I grow in wisdom, character, and faith. 'On the advice of my attorney, I will not discuss the details of this case, but I want to be clear: from the very beginning I have refuted these allegations and maintained my innocence. I stand firm by that today.' Details of the allegations remain unclear, but Bond has filed suit against his accuser, claiming their encounter was consensual and that the woman was seeking a financial settlement. According to the complaint obtained by Daily Mail, the accuser 'did make the indirect threat that, due to Bond's high-profile status, Bond "better be careful not to catch a case."' Bond's attorneys claimed he asked the woman to leave at that point, only for her to demand $5,000 or face the accusation that he 'assaulted her during their consensual sexual encounter.' Both sides have since agreed to a resolution and the case was dismissed with prejudice. Bond made a name for himself at Texas with his blinding speed and later ran the 40-yard dash at the NFL scouting combine in just 4.39 second. He was expected to be a Day 2 draft pick, with ESPN's Mel Kiper arguing he should go before the third round. But, following the sexual assault claims, Bond went undrafted in April. Now he has a chance to catch on in Cleveland, where the Browns are looking to complement star receiver Jerry Jeudy with a deep threat who can stretch opposing defenses downfield. Of course, head coach Kevin Stefanski is still working to determine which of his five quarterbacks will be under center in Week 1: Shedeur Sanders, Dillon Gabriel, Brett Hundley, Joe Flacco or Kelly Pickett.