A TikTok video from Arizona mom Whitney Sheahan has racked up more than 40 million views after she tested the power folding back seat on her brand new Ford Expedition. In the clip, Sheahan places a baby sized doll on the third row seat and presses the auto fold button, fully expecting the seat to stop the moment it touches the doll. It does not. The seat keeps pressing down until the doll is completely flattened underneath it. Sheahan was inspired to run the test after the death of a 2 year old girl from Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. On March 7, the toddler was killed in Akron when the third row power seat in her family’s 2026 Hyundai Palisade folded down on her, according to People. Her father had stepped into a Restaurant Depot while her mother stayed in the parked SUV with two children. The seat somehow activated and pinned the little girl. Bystanders rushed over to try and lift the seat, but they could not get it to move back up. She was taken to Akron Children’s Hospital, where she died. The Summit County Medical Examiner ruled the death an accident. Sheahan’s video has pulled in 2.6 million likes and 22.5 thousand comments, with most viewers reacting in shock. “Literally broke my heart,” she wrote in the caption. One commenter named KTbug summed up the confusion many felt by asking, “Omg is there no sensor to make it stop??” Another comment, asking if the seats were folding seats or a hydraulic press, has gained more than 799 thousand likes on its own. This is the kind of thing nobody thinks about until it’s too late The Akron tragedy pushed Hyundai to act fast. On March 13, Hyundai issued a stop sale on the 2026 Palisade Limited and Calligraphy trims. Soon after, it announced a full recall covering around 68,500 vehicles in the United States and Canada. Kia followed with a matching recall on 568 units of the 2027 Telluride Hybrid SX Prestige and X Line SX Prestige with the Executive Package. Hyundai is now rolling out an over the air software update through its Bluelink system to improve how the seats detect people and objects, with a permanent fix still being worked on. Stories like this join a long list of shocking car rental discoveries and vehicle surprises going viral online. @whitneysheahan Literally broke my heart I went into this 100% thinking my seats would stop, as most of us would. My heart goes out to the little girl and her family. *In no way is this meant to be a mockery. This video is purely to help make others aware* #saftey #childsafety #carseatsaftey #fordexpedition #fail ♬ original sound – Whitney | SAHM What makes the story sting more is that Hyundai had been warned. Ashley Groussman, a mom in Los Angeles, told News 5 Cleveland that on her very first day with a 2026 Palisade Calligraphy back in August 2025, the power seat began folding down on her 9 year old daughter after a friend in the third row bumped the button. She said she had to physically pull her child out to safety. Consumer Reports also found at least three earlier complaints filed with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration about Palisade seats moving without warning. So far, Ford has not issued a recall on the Expedition or made any public statement about Sheahan’s video. The 2026 Expedition currently has no NHTSA recalls tied to its power folding seats. Newsweek says it has reached out to both Sheahan and Ford for comment. Some viewers have suggested that Sheahan’s seat may be defective, with one 2024 Expedition owner writing that their own seat pops back up the moment a jacket touches it. The whole situation has become one of those wild viral stories that keep circling back to the same question about who is responsible for safety. Amber Rollins, who runs the group Kids and Car Safety, has been pushing for a real auto reverse system on all power folding seats, saying the technology should never be able to crush a small child.