Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 21
Fake AAA Email Pushes July 1 Car Rule, Threatening $200 Fines
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 21

Fake AAA Email Pushes July 1 Car Rule, Threatening $200 Fines

1 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jun 21

Summary

  • AAA confirmed a widely circulated email about a July 1, 2026 car-safety rule and $200 fines did not come from the organization and could be malicious.
  • The message claims every passenger vehicle must carry a certified rescue tool, but it sends recipients to a shared Google link instead of an official AAA or government site.
  • Red flags include a sender address ending in middlerunred.guru, missing AAA branding, pressure language about family safety and a 60-second compliance check, and repeated suspicious links including an opt-out link.
  • The email also cites NHTSA FMVSS 571.220, a real standard covering school bus rollover protection, not a mandate for everyday vehicles to carry emergency tools.
  • Drivers are advised to verify sender domains, avoid surprise links or forms, check legal claims on official sites, and report the message as phishing.

Insights

A fake July 1 car safety rule is targeting drivers. Can you spot the lie before clicking the link?
Scammers now use AI and Google's servers to attack you. Is your inbox safe when fakes look this perfect?