Dramatic video footage shows the moment a vehicle belonging to Cincinnati Bengals cornerback Cam Taylor-Britt collided with a parked Chevy Cruze, causing his car to flip over on an otherwise empty Covington, Kentucky street.
The video, obtained by Kentucky’s WKRC, was taken by a doorbell camera on the 400 block of Scott Street at around 3 a.m. local time on November 15, 2025. It shows Taylor-Britt’s black Jeep entering the frame from the right, where it runs a red light and collides with the parked car. The Jeep flips onto its back as it slides out of frame, dragging the Chevy down the street with it.
A crash report indicates Taylor-Britt, 26, was a backseat passenger at the time, according to WKRC.
The accident footage surfaced just days after Taylor-Britt finished serving a five-day jail sentence for a reckless driving incident that took place in September 2025. He pled guilty to the charge on January 6, offering an apology for his actions.
“I just want to apologize, first and foremost for my actions that I’ve put everybody else through,” Taylor-Britt said, per ESPN. “Not intentional in [any] way.”
As police sorted out the scene from the more recent crash, police bodycam footage obtained by WKRC shows officers confused over who was driving the car, as both vehicles were empty when they arrived at the scene. Police determined Taylor-Britt had already left the scene.
“No one is in there, no one is in there they all fled, I guess,” one officer is heard saying.
Later, a man named Jafabian Booker, who said he is Taylor-Britt’s brother, arrives to tell officers that the vehicle belongs to the Bengals star and that a woman was behind the wheel at the time of the crash.
“He wasn’t in here,” Booker says when asked where Taylor-Britt is. “I had a female in here. She was drunk driving and this happened.”
When asked where the unnamed woman went, Booker says, “She ran off.”
Footage also captures one officer saying the scene “reeks of weed,” with another remarking on the position of the driver’s seat in the jeep.
“Girl supposed to be 5’4 driving the car with the seat all the way back — ain’t no way,” he says. “Football player was driving, yeah he was driving.”
When police arrived at Taylor-Britt’s home, the former second-round NFL Draft pick offered to return to the scene.
“It is what it is,” he says. “I can go back there, but there ain’t nothing to it. I wasn’t driving.”
Taylor-Britt then insists Booker was driving at the time, and later in the police footage, Booker admits to the same.
Taylor-Britt suffered a season-ending foot injury the day after the incident in a game against the Pittsburgh Steelers.
With Cincinnati already having plenty of depth at outside cornerback, the Nebraska alum, who is now a free agent, admitted it may be time to part ways with the Bengals.
“I’m not opposed to it,” Taylor-Britt said after his sentencing. “At the end of the day, I don’t think anybody would be mad at a new change of scenery.”












