The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsbrave-wren-240

At-fault driver's family was inside my car after the crash — is that even legal??

I'm still wrapping my head around this so bear with me.

I was rear-ended pretty badly on the highway a few weeks ago. Wasn't going anywhere near the speed limit when it happened — I was basically stopped in slow traffic. The other driver hit me hard enough that my car got pushed into the one ahead of me. I had a pretty serious neck and back injury and ended up being taken away by ambulance, so I wasn't even conscious at the scene for part of it.

Here's the thing that's been eating at me: my attorney recently got hold of the dashcam footage from a nearby vehicle, and at some point after the crash — while police were still on scene doing their thing — you can clearly see the at-fault driver AND what looks like a passenger from his car just... getting into my vehicle. Not emergency responders. Not cops. The actual people responsible for the accident. One of them appears to be leaning into the center console area.

I have no idea what they were doing. Could be totally innocent. Could be something way worse.

What really bothers me is that later in the claims process, some details about pre-existing damage to my car suddenly became a big talking point from the other side — damage I'm pretty sure wasn't there before the crash. And now I'm connecting dots I wish I didn't have to connect.

My attorney knows about the footage but I haven't heard back yet. In the meantime I just need to know — has anyone dealt with something like this? Is it normal for random bystanders to just walk into a crash victim's vehicle while police are right there? Feels like a massive violation on top of everything else I'm going through.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 19
    mellow-hare-076

    I worked in claims for years and I'll be honest with you — the 'pre-existing damage' play is one of the oldest moves in the book. Whether it's legitimate or not, it's used to reduce payouts or shift partial fault. If someone got into that car and had any ability to create or document 'evidence' before the scene was cleared, that is genuinely alarming. Keep every piece of footage you have and make sure your attorney gets a certified copy archived somewhere.

    • 2
      steady-walker511

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 15
    genuine-vole-686

    The timing of that 'pre-existing damage' argument showing up on the other side is NOT a coincidence. Adjusters love to use stuff like that to chip away at your claim, and if someone planted doubt — or worse, actually tampered with something — that's exactly the kind of thing that benefits them. Don't let anyone gaslight you into thinking you're overreacting. You have video. That matters.

  • 14
    clever-raven-473

    Oh wow, this gave me chills. Something similar happened to me — not the same situation, but the other party's people were hovering way too close to my car after the accident before police secured the scene. It felt so wrong in the moment and I couldn't explain why. Trust your gut on this. The fact that you have it on footage is huge.

  • 14
    brave-dove-819

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this on top of recovering from the crash itself. That footage would have me losing sleep too. It just feels like such a violation — you're literally in the hospital and someone's rifling through your car. I hope your attorney moves fast on this.

  • 12
    clever-finch-903

    I don't want to dismiss what you're seeing, but one thing worth considering: could the people on camera have been retrieving something for you — like a phone or insurance card — at the request of a first responder? I've seen that happen at scenes. Not saying that's what happened here, just worth thinking through before drawing conclusions. What does the footage actually show them doing, as specifically as you can tell?

  • 11
    spry-crow-760

    A few practical things worth knowing: accident scenes are generally under police authority while investigation is active, meaning civilians — including parties to the accident — typically have no right to access another person's vehicle. If there's video showing it happened, that footage should be preserved as-is (don't share it widely, don't post it publicly). Your attorney can potentially use this to challenge any claims the other side makes about pre-existing conditions on the car. Make sure you've told your attorney specifically about the timing of when the pre-existing damage argument first came up.

    • 10
      calm-otter-410

      Stop waiting to hear back — call your attorney's office directly and tell them you need to discuss the footage before anything else moves forward on the property damage side. If they're dragging their feet, send a written message so there's a record that you flagged it. This isn't the kind of thing to leave sitting in a voicemail.

  • 11
    warm-fox-923

    On top of all the legal stuff — please make sure you're not letting this stress spiral derail your physical recovery. Neck and back injuries from rear-end collisions are no joke, and stress genuinely slows healing. I know it's hard to 'just focus on recovery' when something this unsettling is happening, but try to let your attorney carry the weight of this part so you can actually rest.

    • 0
      plainspoken-sidewalk442

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 8
    daring-crow-154

    Not legal advice, but this is exactly why your attorney needs to see that footage in full, not just a clip. Unauthorized entry into a vehicle at an active accident scene raises real questions — potentially about tampering with evidence, trespassing, and the integrity of the scene itself. The connection to the pre-existing damage argument is also worth flagging explicitly to your attorney if you haven't already. Push for a response.

    • 5
      thankful-sidewalk119

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.