Self-Driving Vehicle Blocked Texas Ambulance From Responding To Mass Shooting At Austin Bar

Waymo Ambulance Austin Texas Shooting
iStockphoto

A Waymo prevented an ambulance from responding to the scene after a gunman opened fire outside of a bar in Austin, Texas on early Sunday morning. It would not get out of the way.

The driverless vehicle wedged itself perpendicular to the road and closed both lanes of traffic.

Fortunately, other first responders were able to get there much faster. The Waymo only caused problems for one ambulance— which is one too many.

Two dead, 14 wounded at a shooting in Austin, Texas.

The suspect, whose name has not yet been mad public by authorities, drove past the popular Buford’s Bar on Sixth Street in Austin several times before he stopped and shot a pistol out of his window. He then parked his car, got out with a rifle, and started to unload multiple rounds on people walking in the area.

Nearby law enforcement officers reported to the scene and shot the gunman dead.

Two innocent bystanders were killed in the shooting. 14 others were wounded, including three who remain in critical condition. As tragic as it is, it could have been much worse.

The Austin Police Department deserves the utmost praise for its rapid response to the shooting. A group of three officers were on the scene within 57 seconds of the first shot fired. The gunman lived less than 90 seconds after he opened fire. Paramedics were there just a few moments later.

It was heroic speed.

Federal partners also responded to the incident, which the FBI is currently treating as an act of terrorism. The shooter is believed to be a 15-year naturalized citizen from Senegal. An investigation is underway.

A Waymo stopped an ambulance from responding to the scene.

Waymo officially launched its driverless, public robotaxi service in Austin, Texas, on March 4, 2025. The service recently expanded to cover to cover more than 140 square miles in the Austin area.

The self-driving vehicles are controlled only by an internal computer that goes off of a series of cameras on the outside of the car. There is no override feature. A majority of the employees who are able to assist a vehicle when it gets stuck in an awkward situation are located in foreign countries.

That became a serious issue on early Sunday morning.

An ambulance that was trying to respond to the shooting on Sixth Street was unable to get by. A two-lane road was completely blocked by a Waymo. The car would not get out of the way. It froze.

The ambulance was completely trapped as a result. It did not have enough room to go around.

I do not know exactly how the situation resolved, but it appears seems like the car was starting to move out of the way by the end of the video. The people waiting on their ride were not sure whether to get in or wait for the ambulance to pass.

Regardless of what happened, this cannot happen. Waymo must be held responsible.

Grayson Weir BroBible editor avatar
Senior Editor at BroBible covering all five major sports and every niche sport imaginable, found primarily in the college space. I don't drink coffee, I wake up jacked.
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