Eight individuals were stranded on the Iron Shark roller coaster at Galveston Island Historic Pleasure Pier in late May 2026, hanging somewhere along the track while firefighters attempted to safely lower them. The rescue operation soon gained popularity on social media thanks to the combination of visual drama, relief, and the unique fear of being stuck on a stalled ride, all of which are filmed on phones by onlookers below.
But what actually transpired on that pier had nothing to do with what happened thereafter. A rumor started spreading that one of the riders who had been rescued had sued a firefighter for inappropriately touching them during the rescue. It spread. It caused indignation. The City of Galveston claims that it was entirely made up.

A fairly clear example of how false information clings to actual occurrences is the roller coaster rescue lawsuit hoax. The actual occurrence was real; a coaster halted, riders were saved, and there were no reported significant injuries. The lawsuit, the fireman, and the accusation of misbehavior were all fictional layers that were added later and didn’t need any explanation to seem believable to someone who came upon it out of the blue in a social media feed.
When they touch on anything that already elicits an emotional reaction, such as mistrust of emergency personnel, pity for rescue victims, or just the reflexive sharing that occurs when a tale seems outrageous enough to justify it, these kinds of fabrications tend to spread the fastest. In order to immediately address the claim, city officials confirmed that neither a lawsuit nor a complaint of this kind had been filed. As usual, the clarification did not go as far as the initial narrative.
It’s worth taking a moment to consider that dynamic since it sheds light on how the public’s perception of legal events develops. Millions are reached by a fake litigation tale. Only a small portion of that audience is reached by the official denial. Additionally, the real court matter involving a real individual, a real injury, and a real filing that is taking place concurrently in a different Texas city is significantly overshadowed by the fake. The Circuit of the Americas action is the actual case, and it merits the attention that the Galveston tale unintentionally diverted.
After becoming stuck on the COTALAND Circuit Breaker roller coaster for over an hour in December 2025, Matthew Cantu filed a $1 million lawsuit against the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, claiming he suffered severe physical injuries and gross negligence. It’s not just uncomfortable to spend an hour on a stalled coaster; depending on how the car stops, passengers may experience severe physical strain, especially if they are seated in a way that limits their circulation, exposes them to intense heat, or prevents them from moving normally for a long time.
Although the weather in Austin is milder in December than it is in the summer, the experience of being stuck in a vehicle or unable to change positions for more than sixty minutes causes the kind of psychological and physical effects that personal injury claims are intended to address.
The legally significant framing is the accusation of gross carelessness. A single maintenance error or an odd mechanical malfunction could be considered standard neglect in a theme park setting. Gross negligence raises the possibility of a wider systemic issue: that Cantu’s predicament was not adequately addressed once the coaster stalled, which exacerbated the harm, and that COTA knew or should have known about circumstances that made prolonged entrapment predictable.
The maintenance records, the emergency response schedule, and any information uncovered throughout the discovery process regarding the Circuit Breaker’s operation and maintenance will probably determine whether the case can prove that standard.
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