Raccoon Breaks Into Liquor Store and Passes Out Drunk in the Bathroom: The AI Fake Video Crisis Behind a Viral Story
Key Takeaways
- •A raccoon in Virginia broke into a liquor store through the ceiling, got drunk, and crawled into the bathroom to sleep it off — earning the name 'Trashed Panda'
- •After the story went viral, AI-generated 'fake surveillance footage' gained millions of views on TikTok, with most viewers believing it was real
- •Raccoons cannot metabolize alcohol; sweet-smelling liqueurs attract them, and urban expansion is making these incidents more frequent
Early on Black Friday morning in 2025, a clerk at a liquor store in Hanover County, Virginia opened the door to find a hole in the ceiling, toppled shelves, and smashed whiskey bottles everywhere.
They thought it was a burglary. Then on the bathroom floor, they found the real "culprit": a raccoon sprawled out on all fours, too drunk to move.
An absurd break-in
Security footage and the subsequent investigation reconstructed the entire sequence: the raccoon apparently fell into the store through a damaged section of the ceiling. While exploring (or rather, destroying) the shelves, it consumed an unknown quantity of alcohol. Afterward it began feeling unwell and made a surprisingly deliberate decision: it crawled into the restroom.
A raccoon got drunk, then walked into the bathroom to rest. The absurdity of this behavior lies in how "civilized" it was. The most common comment was: "Even a drunk raccoon knows to go to the bathroom — humans can't always say the same."
An animal rescue center briefly housed the raccoon. It sobered up naturally with no serious harm — just hangover symptoms. The shelter named it "Trashed Panda" (a play on the raccoon nickname "Trash Panda") and launched charity merchandise to support wildlife rescue.
Going viral, memes, then fake videos
The raccoon story went viral on social media. But almost simultaneously, a video claiming to be "surveillance footage of the raccoon breaking into the liquor store" started spreading wildly on TikTok. In the video, a raccoon wobbles between shelves, picks up a bottle, and takes a lick.
The problem: that video was AI-generated.
The real surveillance footage was never made public. Neither the store nor the animal rescue center ever released any footage. But the AI-generated "fake surveillance video" garnered millions of views on TikTok, and most viewers believed it was real.
What you didn't know: the challenge of identifying AI-generated fake videos
The raccoon liquor store incident is a perfect AI fake video case study because it meets all the conditions for being "hard to identify."
First, the story itself is true. A raccoon really did break into a liquor store and get drunk. This gave viewers no reason to doubt the video. Second, surveillance footage is inherently low quality. AI-generated low-resolution video passes scrutiny more easily than high-definition video because the blur itself masks flaws. Third, the video's content was "plausible." A raccoon walking between shelves, knocking over bottles, and drinking — all of these behaviors matched audience expectations.
When all three conditions are met simultaneously, even experienced viewers find it nearly impossible to judge authenticity at first glance.
The real risks of wildlife and alcohol
The raccoon-in-the-liquor-store story sounds funny, but behind it lies a serious issue: the risk of alcohol poisoning when wild animals accidentally consume alcohol.
Raccoons' livers lack sufficient enzymes to metabolize alcohol. Even small amounts of alcohol intake can cause severe toxic reactions: loss of coordination, difficulty breathing, hypothermia, and even death. This raccoon survived partly because it was discovered promptly and taken to an animal rescue center.
The animal rescue center noted in its statement that as cities expand, the overlap between wildlife and human living spaces is increasing. Incidents of raccoons entering stores, restaurants, and homes are on the rise in the United States. Liquor stores are particularly dangerous for raccoons because the scent of sweet alcoholic beverages (liqueurs, fruit wines) attracts them.
The most absurd civility
Back to that scene: a raccoon got drunk, crawled into the bathroom, and lay sprawled on the floor.
The reason this image made the whole world laugh isn't because raccoons are funny. It's because its behavior was so human. Drank too much, felt sick, found a quiet place to lie down. This sequence is exactly the same as human behavior on a Friday night.
When city and nature intersect, behavioral norms have never belonged exclusively to humans. Sometimes, animal instinct understands better than we do how to maintain order amid chaos.
At least it knew to go to the bathroom.