SHADOWS AT 80 MPH: THE TERRIFYING RISE OF DASHCAM BIGFOOT ENCOUNTERS
By Investigative Correspondent December 25, 2025
For decades, the search for Sasquatch was confined to the deepest, most unreachable pockets of the Pacific Northwest. Legend told of a shy, reclusive giant that vanished at the first snap of a twig. But in the age of the digital eye, the legend has moved. It is no longer lurking just in the shadows of the Redwoods; it is stepping directly into the glare of LED headlights.
A surge of terrifying “driver-cam” footage has recently stunned the scientific community. These are not staged expeditions. These are long-haul truckers, midnight commuters, and rural travelers who were not searching for a monster—but found one standing in their lane.

THE OLYMPIC PENINSULA COLLISION: A BODY IN THE ROAD
The most haunting case began at 8:52 p.m. on a fog-choked logging road in Washington’s Olympic Peninsula. Devon McCready, a veteran truck driver, was navigating the “Green Labyrinth” when his 18-wheeler struck a massive figure at nearly 80 km/h.
“It wasn’t a deer,” McCready later reported. “A deer bounces. This felt like hitting a brick wall made of muscle.”
Photos that surfaced on social media shortly after the incident—posted by an account named Pobang Ambishoso—showed a creature that defied biological classification. Lying motionless in the roadway was a being covered in thick, matted fur with hands nearly twice the size of a human’s. The facial structure was a disturbing middle ground: too flat for a bear, too heavy for a man. While skeptics cried “hoax,” the sheer scale of the anatomy left biologists scrambling for answers.
THE HAPPY CAMP PURSUIT: COORDINATED PREDATION
If the Olympic Peninsula case suggested a tragic accident, the November 2018 encounter of Darren Keats suggested something far more sinister: strategy.
Keats was hauling 19 tons of logs near Happy Camp when his headlights caught a figure running alongside his cab. At 50 mph, the creature wasn’t struggling; it was matching his speed with a rhythmic, effortless stride. Moments later, Keats heard a sound that haunted his sleep for years: a heavy thud on the roof of his truck.
The metal caved in directly over the driver’s seat. Something was trying to get in.
“It wasn’t an animal attack,” Keats told investigators. “It was an ambush.” As he accelerated to 85 mph to shake the creature, a second figure stepped into the middle of the road, standing its ground with terrifying defiance. The collision was inevitable. Metal exploded, and the creature’s massive weight was dragged beneath the chassis. This wasn’t the behavior of a frightened animal—it was a coordinated attempt by a pack to stop a vehicle.
THE OREGON CROSSWALK: ACCIDENTAL ICONOGRAPHY
Not every roadside sighting is a horror story. In July 2016, a single image of a Sasquatch raising its hand to cross an intersection went viral, seemingly proving that Bigfoot had “learned traffic laws.”
However, this case provided a rare moment of clarity in the cryptid world. The Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) later revealed they had used a professional actor in a high-end suit for a pedestrian safety campaign. Ironically, the campaign was too successful; the still images were so convincing that they are still cited today as “proof” by those who haven’t seen the full video. It serves as a stark reminder: in the world of Bigfoot, the line between a safety PSA and a supernatural sighting is razor-thin.
BEYOND THE ROADSIDE: THE ALBERTA SILHOUETTE
On May 30, 2024, near the Sunchild First Nation in Alberta, Canada, another dashcam captured a figure that defied the “man-in-a-suit” explanation. A driver, stopping to check his load at an industrial site, spotted a figure standing between 11 and 13 feet tall.
The silhouette captured on the dashcam as the driver fled showed a creature whose shoulders cleared the low treeline. Its stillness was its most terrifying trait. It didn’t growl. It didn’t charge. It simply watched. When experts analyzed the footage, the proportions—the “cranial-to-shoulder ratio”—did not match human anatomy. To fake a 13-foot height would require stilts and a suit that would make fluid movement impossible, yet the creature’s posture was perfectly balanced.
THE APPALACHIAN PHANTOM: THE SILENT RUNNER
Perhaps the most unsettling encounter is the one the driver didn’t even notice. In 2022, a man filming a casual off-road drive in the Appalachians reviewed his footage that evening only to realize he hadn’t been alone.
Along the right edge of the frame, a dark shape moved parallel to his ATV. It ran through the dense brush on two legs, maintaining a perfect pace while remaining completely silent. The driver reported hearing nothing—no snapping branches, no heavy footfalls. This “Silent Runner” phenomenon suggests that these creatures possess an evolved ability to move through the woods with a stealth that contradicts their massive size.
CONCLUSION: A NEW BIOLOGICAL REALITY?
Are these videos elaborate hoaxes, or is the scientific community facing a new biological reality? The consistency of these reports—the “long-arm” stride, the “no-neck” silhouette, and the habit of pacing vehicles—points toward a singular species that has adapted to the human expansion of the wilderness.
Whether they are crossing the road with a stolen chicken or slamming into the roofs of semi-trucks, one thing is clear: Sasquatch is no longer a ghost of the deep woods. It is a resident of our highways.