PHOENIX: A federal jury in Phoenix ordered Uber Technologies to pay $8.5 million to a passenger who said she was sexually assaulted by a driver, marking a closely watched verdict in litigation that includes thousands of similar claims against the ride-hailing company across the United States. The award consisted of compensatory damages and followed a trial that tested whether Uber can be held liable for a driver’s conduct during a trip arranged through its app.

The plaintiff, Jaylynn Dean, said she was assaulted during an Uber ride in Arizona in November 2023 after she became intoxicated and requested transportation to her hotel. Dean, who was 19 at the time and is from Oklahoma, sued Uber and argued the company should bear responsibility for what she described as an assault committed by a driver dispatched through its platform. The driver involved was not the defendant at trial in the same way as the company.
Jurors found Uber liable on an agency theory, concluding the driver acted as Uber’s agent, and awarded $8.5 million in compensatory damages. The jury did not award punitive damages, and it rejected separate claims that Uber was negligent or that its safety systems were defectively designed. The plaintiff’s legal team had asked for far larger damages during the case, including a request that exceeded $140 million, while Uber argued the driver was an independent contractor.
The case was treated as a bellwether trial within broader litigation over alleged sexual assaults involving Uber drivers. More than 3,000 similar lawsuits have been filed in federal court and centralized in a single proceeding in California under U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer, with additional cases pending in California state court. Bellwether trials are used to test evidence and legal arguments that may be repeated across related cases, while remaining binding only on the parties in the individual trial.
Bellwether verdict and liability findings
Uber said it will appeal the Phoenix verdict. The company has long maintained that drivers who use its platform are independent contractors, and it has argued that criminal acts by drivers are outside the scope of what the company controls. After the verdict, Uber emphasized that jurors did not find the company negligent and did not conclude its safety systems were defective, while Dean’s side pointed to the jury’s finding that Uber was responsible under an agency theory tied to the ride arrangement.
The Phoenix trial followed another bellwether case in California state court that resulted in a defense verdict for Uber in 2025. In that earlier trial, jurors found Uber had been negligent but concluded the negligence was not a substantial factor in causing the plaintiff’s harm. Together, the outcomes highlight how different juries can reach different conclusions based on the evidence presented and the legal standards applied in each court, even when the claims involve similar allegations about rides arranged through the app.
Safety reporting and broader claims
Uber has published U.S. safety reports that include data on sexual assault complaints connected to its platform. In its reporting, Uber said it recorded 2,717 sexual assault incidents in the United States during 2021 and 2022, compared with 5,981 during 2017 and 2018, while noting that the figures represent a small fraction of the total number of trips. Uber has also said it has expanded safety tools and screening processes over time, and it has highlighted efforts aimed at preventing drivers with serious complaints from returning to ride-hailing platforms.
The verdict drew attention from investors because it was the first federal bellwether case to reach a jury in the consolidated docket. Uber shares fell in after-hours trading after the decision, and shares of rival Lyft also declined. The market reaction underscored that the litigation over alleged driver sexual assaults is being closely monitored across the ride-hailing industry, given the volume of claims and the potential financial exposure tied to individual jury awards.
The Phoenix case returns to the trial court for post-verdict proceedings and is expected to move into the appellate process based on Uber’s stated intent to appeal. Meanwhile, the larger pool of lawsuits centralized in California continues, with additional bellwether trials intended to help courts and parties evaluate recurring issues in the litigation. The Phoenix verdict stands as a compensatory award tied to one plaintiff’s allegations, and it does not determine outcomes for other riders’ claims pending in federal and state courts.
