How Snapchat and stupidity almost left five people dead

Snapchat's speed filter is an awful, awful idea. For those unaware, it's a feature of the popular messaging app Snapchat that uses sensors in a smartphone to record the speed at which a user is traveling when he or she sends a message. Users earn trophies for reaching high speeds, so needless to say they often try to send snaps from fast-moving cars. And if they're stupid enough, they try to send snaps while they're driving fast-moving cars.

Enter Christal McGee, an 18-year-old girl from Atlanta who almost killed herself and left another driver with brain injuries when she struck his car at over 100 mph while using Snapchat.

MUST SEE: Completely change the look of your iPhone with round folder icons, no jailbreak needed

There is little question that Snapchat's speed filter encourages young users to do things that aren't smart, but it takes someone truly special to push things as far as Christal McGee did. While driving her parent's Mercedes down the highway in Atlanta, Georgia last September, McGee decided to test the limits of the speed filter.

With three passengers in the car, McGee used Snapchat to take selfies while traveling at speeds as fast as 113 mph, according to the speed filter in the Snapchat app. With her attention on her phone instead of on the road, the teenager didn't see Wentworth Maynard merging onto the highway ahead.

McGee struck the man's car while traveling at 107 mph, a lawsuit filed by Maynard says. According to NY Daily News, the lawsuit seeks unspecified damages from McGee and Snapchat, which is named in the lawsuit because the company's speed filter "motivated" McGee's reckless driving. Maynard, an Uber driver, was left with brain damage that his lawyers say will prevent him from doing his job.

“We’ll see to it that Christal McGee is held responsible, but we also want to see Snapchat held responsible,” one of Maynard’s attorneys said in a statement. “This is a product liability case because Snapchat put something very dangerous in the marketplace without any warnings or safeguards, and basically said, whatever happens, happens.”

And now, the cherry on top: Following the crash that could easily have left all five people dead, McGee sent the following snap while lying bloody on a gurney in the back of an ambulance:

article-snap-0426
article-snap-0426

Related stories

3D Stickers are the new Snapchat feature all your friends will be talking about

How to use all of Snapchat's new features from the Chat 2.0 update

How to join Snapchat's Android beta and get new features before anyone else

More from BGR: 12 paid iPhone apps on sale for free today

This article was originally published on BGR.com