A rideshare assault claim arises when a passenger is physically attacked, sexually assaulted, threatened, or otherwise harmed during a trip by an Uber or Lyft driver, or in some cases by a third party whose presence in the vehicle was enabled by the platform’s failure to maintain adequate safety protocols. These claims are distinct from standard vehicle collision cases and from straightforward negligent security claims, because rideshare assault cases directly implicate the platform’s role in creating the conditions for the harm. Uber and Lyft do not merely provide software. They approve each driver, set behavioral standards, collect trip data in real time, receive and process passenger complaints, and retain the ability to deactivate drivers at any time. That level of operational control creates legal responsibility when those decisions, or the failure to make them, result in a passenger being harmed.
Under Kentucky law, the civil claims available to rideshare assault survivors typically involve negligent hiring, which holds a company liable for bringing a driver onto the platform who had a history that proper screening would have flagged; negligent retention, which holds the company liable for keeping a driver active after receiving complaints or warning signs about their conduct; and negligent supervision, which addresses the company’s failure to monitor driver behavior and respond appropriately to known risks. These are premises liability and negligence principles applied to the rideshare context, and Kentucky courts recognize them in full. A civil claim against Uber or Lyft exists entirely independently of any criminal case against the driver, and pursuing civil accountability does not require waiting for a criminal conviction or even a criminal charge.
Louisville’s downtown entertainment corridors, the airport route along I-264, the late-night rideshare activity in NuLu, Bardstown Road, and the Highlands, and the high-volume pickup and dropoff activity around KFC Yum Center and Churchill Downs all generate conditions where rideshare assault risks are concentrated and foreseeable. Whether your assault occurred at the beginning of a trip, during the ride, at the destination, or in connection with a pickup attempt that went wrong anywhere in Jefferson County or throughout the Commonwealth, Forman & Associates has the legal knowledge and trial experience to build a case that reaches every layer of corporate responsibility involved.
Most rideshare assault survivors do not immediately understand that they may have a civil claim against the platform, not just the driver. The criminal process, if one is initiated, focuses entirely on the individual perpetrator and does nothing to compensate the survivor for the physical injuries, psychological trauma, medical costs, and lost income the assault has caused. Meanwhile, Uber and Lyft’s safety and claims teams begin managing their own exposure from the moment an assault is reported through the app. Their process is designed to gather information from the survivor’s perspective while sharing as little as possible about the driver’s history, prior complaints, and the platform’s internal handling of those complaints. RAINN and survivor advocacy organizations consistently note that rideshare companies’ incident response systems are built around managing liability rather than prioritizing the survivor’s wellbeing.
The steps a survivor takes in the period following an assault directly affect the strength of the civil case. Seek medical attention as soon as possible, both for your physical wellbeing and to create contemporaneous medical documentation of injuries and their connection to the incident. Report the assault to local law enforcement, because a police report creates an official record that forms part of the evidentiary foundation for the civil claim. Preserve all documentation from the ride, including the app’s trip record, the driver’s name and rating, the route taken, and any in-app communications. Do not delete the app or the trip history. Do not accept any compensation, platform credits, or resolution offers from Uber or Lyft before speaking with a rideshare assault lawyer, because these can be structured to compromise your civil rights without you realizing it.
What many survivors do not fully understand is that Uber and Lyft’s in-app incident reporting process is managed by the company’s safety team, which works in the company’s interest, not the survivor’s interest. Information you provide through that process becomes part of the company’s claims file before you have any legal representation. Forman & Associates issues immediate legal preservation demands to Uber or Lyft, their insurers, and all relevant third parties the moment we take your case, locking down driver background records, prior complaint histories, deactivation histories, and all trip data before that evidence can be managed, altered, or withheld.
The hours and days following a rideshare assault are simultaneously the most critical period for your physical and psychological recovery and for the preservation of the evidence your civil case depends on. Physical injuries from an assault, including soft tissue trauma, bruising, and injuries that are not immediately apparent, require prompt medical documentation. Psychological injuries including acute stress responses, anxiety, and the onset of PTSD symptoms also require early clinical evaluation, because the psychological impact of sexual and physical assault is well-documented and compensable under Kentucky law. Every day that passes between the assault and your first medical visit is a day the defense will use to question the severity and the causal connection of your injuries.
Rideshare assault civil claims require investigation on multiple simultaneous tracks that most general personal injury firms are not equipped to manage. The driver’s background check and approval history must be obtained to establish what Uber or Lyft knew or should have known before putting that driver on the platform. The driver’s complaint history and any prior deactivation and reactivation records must be obtained to establish the company’s knowledge of prior conduct issues. The platform’s internal safety protocols and their adequacy relative to industry standards must be evaluated by experts. Trip data, including GPS logs, in-app communications, and any available dashcam or surveillance footage from the route, must be preserved immediately. And the full scope of the survivor’s physical and psychological injuries must be documented by the right medical experts to establish the complete damages picture. An experienced rideshare assault lawyer coordinates all of these investigative tracks from day one.
At Forman & Associates, we take control of the civil case from the moment we are retained. We identify every viable legal theory against every responsible party, from the individual driver to the platform’s corporate parent and its liability insurers. We issue immediate legal preservation demands for all driver records, complaint histories, background check documentation, and trip data. We communicate directly with Uber, Lyft, and their legal representatives so that survivors are not navigating a process specifically designed to minimize what the company pays. We connect survivors with the medical and psychological resources they need, and we never advise a client to accept any offer from the platform or its insurer until we have built the complete picture of what the assault has cost them and what full accountability looks like.
When an Uber or Lyft driver sexually assaults a passenger during a trip, the platform's civil liability arises from its role in selecting and retaining that driver and its failure to implement safety measures adequate to prevent foreseeable harm. These cases frequently involve prior complaints against the same driver that the platform received and failed to act on, and they are among the most significant civil claims in rideshare litigation.
Rideshare drivers who physically assault passengers during a trip, at a destination, or in connection with a dispute over the ride create direct civil claims against both the driver and the platform. These cases often involve evidence of prior aggressive conduct that proper background screening or complaint monitoring should have identified before the driver was allowed to continue accepting passengers.
Louisville's entertainment district rideshare activity, concentrated on weekends and in connection with major venue events, creates elevated assault risk conditions that platforms are aware of and that create foreseeable harm when adequate safety protocols are not in place. Evidence of the platform's awareness of elevated risk during specific periods and in specific areas is relevant to establishing corporate negligence in these cases.
Uber and Lyft's background check processes have been challenged in courts across the country. When a driver who had a criminal history, a history of prior assaults, or a documented pattern of concerning conduct was approved or retained on the platform, the company's screening failure is itself an independent basis for civil liability regardless of what the driver did during the ride in question.
When a driver had prior passenger complaints about inappropriate conduct, threatening behavior, or physical contact that the platform received through its own reporting system and chose not to act on, those complaints establish notice. A platform that had notice of a driver's conduct and kept that driver active bears direct liability for the harm that driver subsequently causes to a new passenger.
Uber and Lyft market specific safety features, including in-app emergency assistance, trip sharing, and driver verification, as protections for passengers. When these features fail to function as represented, when a passenger attempts to use an emergency feature and it does not work as described, the company's failure to deliver on its safety representations is a component of the civil case alongside the negligent hiring and retention claims.
Rideshare assault survivors are entitled to pursue full compensation for every economic and non-economic consequence of the assault under Kentucky law. Because civil claims in rideshare assault cases target both the individual driver and the corporate platform, and because Uber and Lyft carry substantial commercial liability insurance, the potential recovery in a rideshare assault case is significantly greater than in cases involving only an individual defendant without meaningful assets. What determines whether that potential is realized is the quality of the legal team building the case against both the driver and the platform simultaneously.
In a Kentucky rideshare assault lawsuit, recoverable damages typically include:
Punitive damages carry significant weight in rideshare assault cases. When discovery reveals that the platform received prior complaints about the same driver, that internal safety evaluations identified the driver as a risk, or that the company’s screening protocols were known to be inadequate and were not improved, the case for punitive damages against the corporate defendant becomes powerful. Punitive damages in these cases are not just about compensating the survivor. They are about making the platform financially accountable for the policies that made the assault foreseeable and preventable.
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Driver background records, prior complaint histories, deactivation and reactivation records, trip data, GPS logs, and all available surveillance footage are all time-sensitive in rideshare assault cases. We issue preservation demands from the moment we take your case, before Uber, Lyft, or any other party has the opportunity to manage what gets produced and what disappears.
The negligent hiring, negligent retention, and negligent supervision frameworks that apply to rideshare assault cases, the corporate structures Uber and Lyft use to limit their liability exposure, the insurance coverage available under applicable commercial policies, and the evidentiary strategies that reach corporate conduct are not abstract concepts to our team. They are the legal landscape we navigate on behalf of rideshare assault survivors. For related claims involving broader platform negligence, see our rideshare injury page.
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Yes. Your civil claim in a rideshare assault case is not limited to the individual driver. Uber and Lyft can be held civilly liable under theories of negligent hiring, negligent retention, and negligent supervision when their screening failures, their failure to act on prior complaints, or their inadequate safety protocols created the conditions that made the assault foreseeable. The platform's civil liability exists independently of the driver's criminal liability, and both can be pursued simultaneously. Forman & Associates evaluates every available theory of liability against every responsible party in every rideshare assault case we handle.
No. Your civil claim against the driver and the platform proceeds entirely independently of any criminal prosecution. You do not need a criminal arrest, a criminal charge, or a criminal conviction to pursue a civil rideshare assault claim. The civil standard of proof, a preponderance of the evidence, is substantially lower than the criminal standard of beyond a reasonable doubt, and the civil case focuses on the platform's conduct as much as the driver's. In many rideshare assault cases, civil litigation proceeds successfully even when the criminal case does not result in a conviction.
Under KRS 413.140, Kentucky's statute of limitations for personal injury claims is one year from the date of the assault. This deadline is strict, and missing it almost certainly eliminates your right to any civil recovery. Evidence preservation is even more time-sensitive. Trip data, driver records, complaint histories, and any available surveillance footage can be lost, purged, or managed by the platform within days of the incident without a legal preservation demand. Contact a rideshare assault lawyer as soon as possible after the assault.
The platform's internal incident response process is managed by their own teams and serves the company's interest in evaluating and limiting liability, not in compensating you or taking meaningful action against the driver. Reporting through the app does not constitute legal action, does not preserve your civil rights, and does not prevent the platform from continuing to use that driver. What it may do is create a record of your report that becomes relevant evidence in the civil case. Forman & Associates uses the platform's own incident documentation, combined with driver history records obtained through litigation, to establish what the company knew and when it knew it.
Rideshare terms of service frequently contain arbitration clauses that companies attempt to use to prevent survivors from pursuing civil claims in court. The enforceability of these clauses in assault cases is challenged on multiple grounds, including public policy arguments that courts have accepted in similar contexts. A rideshare assault lawyer evaluates the specific terms and the specific circumstances of your case to identify every argument available to preserve your right to pursue the claim in the civil court system where juries, rather than arbitrators, evaluate the evidence and determine accountability.
Accepting credits or a refund from Uber or Lyft in the immediate aftermath of an assault does not automatically waive your civil rights, but it depends entirely on what you were asked to sign or agree to in connection with that resolution. Some platform responses to assault complaints are structured to include releases of future legal claims that a survivor may not recognize as such. Before accepting anything from the platform, speak with a rideshare assault lawyer. If you have already accepted something, contact us anyway, because the specific terms of what was offered and accepted determine whether your civil claim remains viable.
Yes. The psychological and emotional harm caused by a sexual or physical assault is fully compensable under Kentucky law regardless of whether visible physical injuries were significant. PTSD, anxiety disorders, depression, sleep disruption, and the lasting impact on daily functioning, relationships, and quality of life are all recognized categories of compensable harm. These injuries are established through clinical documentation by mental health professionals and, where appropriate, through expert testimony about the nature and duration of the psychological harm. The National Institute of Mental Health documents the serious and lasting impact of trauma-related disorders, and our firm works with the clinical experts necessary to translate that reality into the damages case.
Platform disputes about whether a driver was officially active at the time of an assault are a known litigation tactic. Trip data, GPS records, app activity logs, and independent evidence from witnesses, surveillance, and the survivor's own documentation of the ride can establish the driver's active status regardless of what the platform subsequently claims about the driver's account status. Forman & Associates issues immediate preservation demands for all of this data from the moment we take your case, and we retain the technical experts necessary to authenticate and present electronic evidence in litigation.
Yes. Forman & Associates represents rideshare assault survivors throughout Kentucky and handles cases nationally. Whether the assault occurred during a Louisville rideshare trip, in Lexington, Bowling Green, Northern Kentucky, or anywhere else in the Commonwealth, we are available to review your case at no cost. Contact us for a free and completely confidential consultation regardless of where in Kentucky the assault occurred.