Automotive Fleet
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Fleet Managers’ Strange Tales for Stranger Times

In an industry growing more complex by the day, the stories only get stranger. You may have experienced these stories yourself — and others you may not believe.

by Chris Brown and Faith Howell
December 22, 2025
An Automotive Fleet graphic depicting strange stories from fleet managers.

From beach bonfires to tree-grown trucks, these fleet stories are stranger than fiction.

Image: Automotive Fleet

6 min to read


Fleet management is about optimizing lifecycles, managing risk, and keeping operations running smoothly. But then there are the days that stretch the limits of what can go wrong.  

We asked fleet managers to share their strangest tales. You may recognize yourself in some of these stories. Others, you'll be grateful you never experienced.

Ad Loading...

At least they keep the job interesting, right?  

This is Why We Have Personal Use Policies

The son of an executive took his dad’s company vehicle to the beach for a bonfire party, recalled Karyna Zarate of Audubon Companies, about an incident from many years ago at a different company.  

“He parked the vehicle on the beach and had a great time partying with his friends… so much so that they all passed out that night on the beach.”

However, they were awoken by the high tide. The tide came in and swept the company's SUV out to sea. “That poor executive did not know how to even explain this to us.”

The Tree Truck: When Nature Took Over Fleet Management

Every fleet has that one vehicle that somehow slips through the cracks, said one anonymous fleet manager. 

Ad Loading...

“You know the one, parked ‘temporarily’ behind a branch office until someone can ‘figure out what to do with it,’” they said. “In our case, that temporary pause lasted about six years (I am likely being kind).”

The vehicle in question was a large utility truck, missing one small component: the engine. Over time, it became less of a truck and more of a nature reserve, they said. “Eventually, a tree, a real, living, photosynthesizing tree, grew straight through the cab floor, out the window, and proudly through the roof like it was claiming new territory.”

“By the time anyone noticed, the truck had achieved a kind of poetic equilibrium,” they said. “It wasn’t mobile, but it was definitely ‘green.’ Removing it required more than a tow; it needed a forestry plan.”

For this fleet manager, there was a fleet lesson learned: “Even an engineless vehicle has scrap-metal value until neglect turns it into scrap metal. A depreciating asset left unmanaged becomes more than just a liability; it becomes part of the ecosystem. Literally.”

An executive enters the fleet manager's office and reports a strange noise coming from his vehicle…more specifically, coming from the engine. The fleet manager asks when the last oil change was. He replies, "I was waiting for the check engine light to come on before I took it in.”

Ad Loading...

You Can’t Eat an Equinox  

A driver was traveling on a remote highway when all of a sudden, his rear passenger window exploded into his car. It was determined that a hunter who shot and missed a deer did not realize there was a public road behind the field he was hunting in.  

“Yes, he missed the deer but bagged an Equinox,” recounted a fleet manager who wished to remain anonymous.  

The Case of the Vindictive Employee

A terminated employee decided to return his company car, which was full of perishable food items, recounted the same fleet manager. He drove the vehicle to a remote area in the Arizona desert, rolled up the windows, left the keys on the front seat, jumped in his friend's car, and fled the country.

The car was found by a police patrol, and they reported the smell was so bad they thought there was a body in the car. “The vehicle had to be totaled due to the damage caused by the rotten food, and the smell could not be removed,” said the fleet manager.  

Jasper, the Workout Ghost

Jeb Lopez, owner of Wheelz Up, remembered the early years of his delivery business growing his driver base and client list.  

Ad Loading...

In 2016, as meal-plan delivery was just emerging, the company partnered with a rising healthy meal company in the D.C. area. Drivers often worked late-night routes, navigating dark hallways and unlit paths among the unpredictability of deliveries between midnight and early morning.  

“One memorable night, a driver entered a gym at 2:30 am to place meals in a fridge using a keypad the owners provided,” said Lopez, adding that the gym was pitch-black and eerily silent.  

“As he hurried to finish, he heard weights clank and saw a pale silhouette raise its arm and point toward him. Terrified, he bolted up the stairs and called us in a panic: "There's a F*** ghost in that gym, man! I'm taking an Uber home, and I quit!”

When Lopez’s team arrived later, the van was still idling outside, lights on. “We checked the gym ourselves. Everything was quiet, though the cold air as we turned off the lights was enough to make us sprint back out.”

Lopez recollected the gym owner’s response: “Sounds like you met Jasper, our resident ghost. He likes to work out in the early hours.”  

Ad Loading...

“We kept the route,” Lopez said, “but added a daylight surcharge.”

The Narcoleptic OEM Rep

“I had a rep from an OEM come into the office, not once but twice, and fall asleep mid-meeting,” said a commercial fleet manager who wishes to remain anonymous, for obvious reasons. “In the first instance, I assumed they were tired from the drive, or maybe from low blood sugar. I gave them the benefit of the doubt.”

But after working with this rep again, it happened again.  

“I don’t know this individual personally, but they have fallen short in areas we were used to seeing top-tier performance,” the fleet manager said. “I still work with this individual from time to time. Maybe I'll begin bringing coffee to our meetings.”

Running Yourself Over Is Grounds for Termination

That same anonymous fleet manager recalled another story about a new fleet manager who pulled a vehicle into the company’s shop on an inclined driveway.  

Ad Loading...

The fleet manager had mistakenly pulled the hood latch instead of the emergency brake, then exited the truck, which rolled back over the fleet manager.  

“Luckily, they sustained only a few minor injuries. However, the individual we hired to keep our drivers safe, informed, and compliant, who runs themselves over, comes with a stigma you can't shake. Needless to say, the individual is no longer with us.”

It’s Called Preventive Maintenance for a Reason, People!  

Joe Lukacs of Sherwin-Williams recalled a situation any fleet manager can commiserate with — a Ford Fusion that racked up 31,409 miles without an oil change before the engine seized.  

“Driver didn’t realize they needed to change oil,” Lukacs said. “After that driver no longer had a company vehicle.”

The Nuns, Fuel Thief, and the Really Bad Smell

Fleet Hall of Famer Lisa Kneggs’s stories run from the unfortunate to the scary to the “what was he thinking?”  

Ad Loading...

Back in the days of the Chevy Lumina (before it was discontinued in 2001), a driver ran into a car full of nuns. “That driver did not have a good day,” she mused.

Like Lukac’s oil abuse story, this one is also all too familiar: A gas station attendant contacted Kneggs with reports that a driver of one of her trucks — with the company logo clearly visible on the side — filled his truck up with fuel and parked at the store.  

He then approached customers and offered to put fuel in their vehicles for cash, using the company’s fuel card. Of course, he was terminated, and charges were filed. And the station attendant? “He received a nice steak dinner and movie tickets,” Kneggs said.  

She recounted the story of the box truck that was stolen, emptied, and taken across multiple state lines. It was finally found, and the driver was arrested for multiple felonies.

“He was a bad, bad dude,” Kneggs said. Upon opening the back of the truck, it was found that a murder had been committed in the truck. “No amount of detailing could save that box.”

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More State of the Fleet Industry

Mark Hogland discusses Union Leasing’s rebrand to Moventum Fleet Management and the company’s expanded focus on strategic fleet services and lifecycle management.

Why Union Leasing Rebranded to Moventum Fleet Management

Mark Hogland discusses Union Leasing’s transition to Moventum Fleet Management and how the rebrand reflects the company’s growing focus on strategic fleet management and lifecycle support.

Read More →
Cover of a whitepaper titled “The Hidden Costs of Departmentally Assigned Vehicles on Your Fleet” featuring a black fleet vehicle driving on a road at sunset. Subheadline reads: “Discover how your fleet can reduce costs and minimize risk by implementing vehicle sharing.” The document focuses on fleet optimization, vehicle sharing, cost reduction, utilization tracking, and risk management for fleet operations.
SponsoredMay 13, 2026

Why Fleet Managers Are Replacing Departmental Vehicles with Shared Motor Pools

Departmentally assigned vehicles often create hidden costs through underutilization, poor visibility, and increased administrative burden. This white paper explores how shared motor pool strategies help fleets reduce costs, improve accountability, and optimize vehicle utilization.

Read More →
An AF news recap thumbnail with red and black text representing storm response and leadership updates in the fleet industry.

From Storm Response to Data Strategy: Fleet Trends to Watch | AF News Recap

In this AF news recap, host Faith Howell covers this week's most pressing industry updates.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
overhead photo of cars in parking lot with data graphic overlay

Report: 36% of Fleet Managers Are Delaying Replacements

Element’s 2026 Market Pulse Report finds fleets are slowing replacement cycles amid tariffs, economic uncertainty, and rising costs.

Read More →
Graphic announcing California DMV autonomous vehicle regulation updates with futuristic self-driving car dashboard visuals and text about staying aligned with regulations.

California Adopts Sweeping New Autonomous Vehicle Regulations

Updated DMV rules open the door for heavy-duty AV testing and deployment while strengthening safety standards, emergency response coordination, and manufacturer accountability.

Read More →
Cover image for the “5th Annual Market Pulse Report” by Element titled “Navigating fleet management in 2026: Data and insights shaping the future of fleet and mobility.” The design features an aerial view of a cable-stayed bridge with vehicles traveling on a highway beside a dense green forest. A teal graphic panel overlays the lower portion of the image, with the Element logo and tagline “Intelligence in motion” at the bottom.
SponsoredMay 6, 2026

Fleet Costs Are Rising: Here’s How Leaders Are Responding

Fleet leaders are under pressure to reduce costs, adapt to economic uncertainty, and make smarter decisions. See how peers across North America are responding with real data, proven strategies, and forward-looking insights. Download the 2026 Market Pulse Report to benchmark your strategy and uncover where you can gain an edge.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Portrait of Michael Orange in a suit with arms crossed against a blue background, announcing his appointment as Stellantis Senior Vice President leading U.S. sales and network performance.

Stellantis Taps Hyundai Exec to Lead U.S. Sales

Effective April 22, Jeep maker Stellantis has named Michael Orange as vice president of U.S Sales.

Read More →
Composite image showing five executives: Anna Pellegrino, Jami Kilpatrick, Clay Corbus, Tony Herget, and Stephanie Wilkinson with company names.

Personnel Update: Montway Auto, ACERTUS, Clean Energy Fuels, and PrePass

Montway, ACERTUS, Clean Energy Fuels, and PrePass announce executive hires and leadership transitions focused on growth, customer experience, and strategic expansion.

Read More →
An Automotive Fleet State of the Fleet Industry template describing fleet revenue in 2026.

Matt Dyer Says Fleet Is Now a Revenue Driver — What Does That Mean for 2026?

As costs and complexity escalate, Merchants Fleet’s CEO outlines how fleets must rethink uptime and TCO to drive business performance.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A blue AF News Recap thumbnail for YT with a description about the state of the fleet industry.

Why 2026 Changes Everything | AF Weekly News Recap

In this week's AF news recap, host Faith Howell covers the top stories from this week that reveal where fleet is going in 2026.

Read More →