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Did House Bill 626 ban ‘aimless driving’? Viral US claim debunked

Posts claiming the US banned ‘aimless driving’ went viral online, but fact-checks found forged notices and misleading claims behind the frenzy.

By Sarwesh Sri Bardhan

May 19, 2026 04:00 IST

A viral claim circulating on social media has falsely alleged that House Bill 626 would make “aimless driving” illegal in the United States and in several states, including Florida, Kentucky, Ohio and Washington.

The posts prompted confusion online after users shared images that appeared to show official notices signed by Donald Trump and state governors, but no such official announcements were found to support the claim.

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Of joyrides and jittery timelines

The allegation gained traction after an Instagram post shared by @art_is_fast showed a purported Ohio government release stating that Gov.

Mike DeWine had signed House Bill 626 into law and that “cruising around,” “joyriding” and “driving with no place to go” were now prohibited. The same wave of posts also presented similarly worded notices allegedly from other states, helping the story spread rapidly across platforms.

The tale begins to wobble

The claim does not hold up under verification. Snopes found no official press release from the White House or from state offices in Florida and Washington.

It also noted that the notices were fraudulent and that the same quote appeared across different states, something Snopes described as highly unusual.

As the fact-check framed it, it was “unlikely that Govs. DeWine, Ron DeSantis, Andy Beshear and Bob Ferguson would all issue the exact same statement.”

Seals askew and details astray

The real House Bill 626 exists in Ohio, but it is not an “aimless driving” law.

The Ohio legislature’s listing says the measure would require courts to supply electronic notification of hearings to defendants in criminal and traffic cases, a very different subject from the viral posts.

The fake Ohio notice used the wrong version of the state seal, while the Florida version had errors in the seal text and an inaccurate central image.

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When official polish begins to crack

The fabricated notices also carried inconsistencies in official-looking branding, including seal errors and missing elements on the presidential emblem.

Taken together, the mismatched design details, the identical wording across different states and the absence of any official confirmation pointed to a coordinated misinformation effort rather than a genuine policy change.

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