He leaned in close to me, sweeping an appreciative gaze over my young legs and white, denim mini skirt.
“How old are you?” he asked, and I obediently answered: Sixteen.
“Sometimes, I fuck 16-year-olds,” the cab driver responded.
Fortunately, when he subsequently tried to take me off-route to “go to an ATM”, I insisted he take me straight home to my waiting parents and he complied.
But the experience left me sickened, and when my parents called the taxi company to complain, they were told the driver had no prior record so the matter would not be pursued.
Related: Radio star groped in a cab: “I can’t get rid of the feeling of him touching me.”
The thing is, the experience was not an isolated one. Two years ago, I filed a formal complaint with a taxi company after another frightening encounter.
The situation began when we arrived at my destination and the driver became frustrated I wasn’t paying quickly enough (I’d left my usual card a restaurant, so I asked that he keep the meter on while I transferred money).
Before I knew it, the cab took off at full speed, taking me along with it — and soon, what began as a bizarre overreaction escalated to a full-blown frightening incident that left me literally begging for release.
As I relayed in my written complaint:
I didn’t know where he was taking me, and I told him he was terrifying me. I eventually started yelling, screaming at him to stop and asking if he was going to assault or rape me. He provided no clear answer but kept driving off yelling “you are not honest! You are not honest!”
I was crying, telling him that I had always intended to pay and would still pay him, but was truly fearing for my safety.
The situation had escalated so fast that I actually opened the car door and considered rolling out to escape. I would have been gravely harmed had I done so, so I stayed within the car and called the police. My back left-hand door remained open for at least two blocks and the driver kept driving at full pace- at least 45km/h.
There is no doubt that this driver knew full well how terrified I was during his joyride, and he only pulled over when I got the police on the phone.
When I complained to the cab company, though? The taxi driver was issued a “verbal warning”. Not a written warning, not a suspension, not an apology from the man who’d reduced me to a crying mess.
Top Comments
This makes me furious. During one cab ride, I asked to stop at a bottle shop and I could feel the hostility coming from the driver. I should have paid for the trip and called another cab at this point. I returned to the car with my purchase and the driver said "In my country, we rape and shoot women like you." WTF?????
My driveway is in a precarious area as far as traffic lights are concerned and at this moment, traffic was pretty much non-existent. I time it wisely so the driver had as easy a job as possible.
He refused to take me up my laneway and my home is in a dark and vulnerable place. To add to this, I was having difficulty finding my disability card and he was getting nasty. the look on his face was pure evil. This made me nervous and he was giving me the death stare. We completed the transaction and I limped the 100 metres to my home. After calling the cab company that employs this driver, I was informed that 'most of the newcomers are like that now'.
I wish I could ask for a particular kind of driver but I would be pilloried by the eternally-offended for obvious reasons. The closest I can get is to ask for a woman driver and they are extremely rare.
The problem with a regulated service like taxis is that both drivers and passengers have natural justice rights so that allegations of misconduct by either are just that and unless there is proof or lots of complaints, nothing happens. Uber is not bound by this so if you are sleazy driver or rude passenger you are gone just like that. And the need for a credit card to use Uber means that the whole don't have enough money issue simply isn't one. Uber is clear example of how unregulated market forces do an infinitely better job for virtually everyone than the unresponsive government regulated monopoly - Uber losers will be cabbis who are incompetent, unhygienic or just rude and offensive passengers who can't or won't abide by societal norms (and those without credit cards) but on the whole a big win. I won't use cabs anymore unless there is absolutely no choice such a cab rank or airport pickup.