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Bengaluru Lamborghini Drift: The viral clip, which clearly shows the number plate KA 05 NR 0009, prompted a citizen to report the incident directly to the police.

After posting the video on (@CitizenReprt)
In the dead of the night, the Lamborghini was seen making its way through Anil Kumble Circle on MG Road in Bengaluru, drifting repeatedly in the wee hours of the night, somewhere between 2 and 3 am. The brazen display has since ignited a wider debate about whether wealth insulates the privileged from real accountability, and whether a fine is really enough on the streets of India’s tech capital.
The viral clip, which clearly shows the number plate KA 05 NR 0009, prompted a citizen to report the incident directly to the Bengaluru Police. After posting the video on
Police responded to the post for more details. Meanwhile, a sharp-eyed commenter turned to mParivahan and raised an obvious suspicion: that the car might not have been registered.
Meanwhile, a News18 reporter delved deeper and confirmed that an FIR has since been lodged. Turning to X with an update, he summed it up in one clear line: “Money can buy supercars — it shouldn’t buy immunity from the law.”
Another night, another rich naughty trick #Bengaluru. The luxury Lamborghini car repeatedly drifted at Anil Kumble Circle, MG Road around 2-3 am. Reckless driving, and not worrying about public safety. Money can buy supercars, but it shouldn’t buy immunity from the law. The police lodged an FIR pic.twitter.com/CbdivWCJl0– Harish Upadhya (@harishupadhya) March 21, 2026
Reactions on social media
One user did not express any criticism, describing this act as not only irresponsible, but criminal negligence. They stressed that public roads are not racing tracks, and called for strict measures, severe penalties and license suspension as a minimum, and urged the authorities to act before this recklessness takes the life of someone.
The second commenter was much more sarcastic, cutting through the outrage with a blunt observation: Lamborghinis belong to the elite, and so, from their perspective, strongly worded posts are all one can expect in response.
Lamborghini belongs to the elites. So the articles are enough — Sivaraman S (@siva_ofc) March 21, 2026
A third echoed these doubts, saying clearly that everyone – including the authorities – already knew that nothing would be achieved as a result. They added that their only relief was that no one was killed.
We know you know nothing will happen to him. Just thankful we didn’t see him kill anyone. — Toten Hami (@bisomatatas) March 21, 2026
A fourth focused his suspicions on the identity of the driver, wondering aloud whether he was the son of a construction worker or a sitting MLA. A News18 reporter who joined the thread struck a more optimistic note, expressing hope that Bengaluru Police would name and expose the person involved.
We hope Bengaluru Police names and exposes this person. — Harish Upadhya (@harishupadhya) March 21, 2026
The fifth voice was a dissenting voice. They said they personally saw nothing wrong with the stunt, as long as no one was hurt, questioning the point of owning a Lamborghini if one couldn’t push it to its limits. They go further, arguing that Indian city roads are riddled with potholes that make it impossible to truly enjoy such sophisticated machines anyway.
I personally feel that this is not wrong as long as no one is killed. What’s the point of buying a Lamborghini if you can’t afford it? 🥹Indian roads are anyway bad inside the city, there are all kinds of things that never allow you to use such luxury bikes or cars. — VTR Ravi Kumar (@vtrrk) March 21, 2026
As for the sixth, he kept it short and clear, offering just four words that sum it all up: Money can’t buy class.
Money doesn’t buy class — Muhabeth ka Sharbath 🥤 (@spot_NIK) March 21, 2026
When luxury cars turned deadly: India’s most famous cases
• Delhi BMW massacre (1999): Delhi businessman Sanjeev Nanda killed six people, including three policemen. He was convicted only in 2008 – the sentence was reduced to time served.
• Ahmedabad Jaguar tragedy (2021): A Jaguar SUV lost control on the Sarkhej-Gandhinagar highway, killing nine people in one of India’s deadliest luxury car accidents.
• Pune Porsche Shock (2024): A 17-year-old killed two IT professionals. The court’s initial punishment – writing an article about road safety – sparked nationwide outrage.
• Noida BMW Strike (2024): A speeding BMW killed two people, including a nurse, and injured three others.
• Mumbai BMW Horror (2024): The son of a former Shiv Sena leader dragged a woman on the hood of a car for more than 1.5 km before she became trapped under the wheels.
• Kanpur Lamborghini Rampage (2026): The son of a tobacco magnate injured six people, then fled for 90 hours while his family’s driver falsely claimed he was behind the wheel.
• Jaipur Luxury Car Massacre (2026): A speeding car, driven by a drunk driver, ran over 16 people late at night, killing one person.
21 March 2026, 3:32 PM IST
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