Woman hospitalized after alleged social media stunt goes wrong
(KTLA) – A new social media challenge, which has people putting buckets on the heads of strangers and filming their reactions, went horribly wrong when a woman in California fainted after a group of young men unexpectedly targeted her for the prank.
The incident happened Sunday afternoon at a Target store in Tustin.
Lana Clay-Monaghan, a new mom of twin boys, said she was shopping for baby supplies when she was caught completely off guard by four teenage boys who tossed a bucket over her head while recording a video. They eventually ran out of the store.
“I was looking at some baby soap. I leaned down and my whole world changed,” Clay-Monaghan said. “Everything went quiet, dark and there was really no air. I flipped off what was put over me, around my neck, and I turned around and looked over my left shoulder. To my dismay, it was a group of individuals who were filming me, seemingly for some sort of prank or maybe for something like TikTok.”
A 30-year cancer survivor, Clay-Monaghan says she developed epilepsy later in life and that the assault deprived her of air. She fainted soon after the incident and was rushed to UC Irvine Medical Center. She now says the incident has had a physical and psychological impact.
“I keep looking over my shoulder. I’m a nervous wreck,” she told Nexstar’s KTLA. “I cannot believe that in my community, you could go to Target, be in Target maybe a mere 10 to 15 minutes and someone would find it amusing to come and strategically find a female by herself in the baby aisle and think this would be funny or laughable for likes.”
Tustin Police, who are reviewing surveillance video from the Target store to identify the four young men, believe the stunt is something called the “stranger bucket challenge,” which is trending on social media platforms like TikTok.
“Obviously, in this case, it can have some pretty bad consequences, but at the end of the day, it’s a crime,” Lt. Ryan Co of the Tustin Police Department said. “It’s an assault and battery on another person, and we’re going to investigate it that way.”
For Clay-Monaghan, who said she’s still recovering, the neurological side effects from the incident are anything but funny.
“This needs to be an example that families can talk about now and say, ‘Look, you see this on social media, it’s not appropriate to do that,’ and again, those individuals need to come forward and be held accountable,” she said.
So far, police said they have not come across any social media posts of this particular incident, and while they’re reviewing surveillance video, they are also collecting witness statements.