The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
Car accidentsplain-hare-997

I caused a crash that seriously hurt someone and I can't stop shaking

I don't even know how to start this. A few days ago I made a split-second misjudgment at an intersection — I thought a large delivery truck was slowing to stop, so I started pulling across. It wasn't stopping. We collided hard enough that both vehicles were completely destroyed.

The driver of the other vehicle was taken away by ambulance. I overheard one of the paramedics say something about a spinal injury. I have no idea how he's doing and I'm terrified to find out.

The officer who responded cited me for failure to yield. He didn't say anything about it going further than that but I've been reading online and I know that when someone gets seriously hurt, citations can turn into something much worse — criminal charges, reckless driving, I don't know.

I'm 22. This is the first time I've ever been in any kind of trouble, driving or otherwise. I have insurance but I don't know if my coverage is even close to enough for something like this. I don't know if I'm about to get sued. I don't know if I'm going to lose my license. I don't know if I'm going to jail.

Honestly the legal stuff almost feels secondary right now. I just keep thinking about that other driver. I made a mistake that lasted maybe two seconds and it may have changed his entire life. The guilt is honestly unbearable.

Has anyone been on this side of an accident? How do you even begin to deal with this — legally, emotionally, any of it? I feel completely alone right now.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 21
    quiet-raven-558

    I was at fault in an accident a few years back — not as serious as yours, thankfully, but I know that suffocating guilt feeling. The first weeks were the worst. What helped me was separating the two things: the legal process (which has its own timeline and you'll get through it) and the emotional weight (which needs its own attention). Please don't try to white-knuckle through both at once. Is there anyone you can talk to? A counselor, a pastor, even just a trusted friend? You need somewhere to put all of this.

    • 23
      sharp-marmot-530

      Not legal advice, but I'll tell you what I'd tell anyone in your position: stop talking about the accident to anyone other than a lawyer. That means social media, friends, even family in casual conversation. Anything you say can surface later. Your insurance company will assign a defense attorney to handle the civil side — that's what liability coverage is for — but you may want a separate criminal defense attorney if charges get upgraded. Consult one sooner rather than later, even if it's just a free initial call. — not legal advice, just general awareness.

  • 17
    mellow-fox-985

    One thing people don't realize: your OWN insurance company is not fully on your side in a situation like this. They'll defend you up to your policy limits, but their ultimate goal is limiting their own exposure. Be careful about the recorded statement they'll ask you to give. You have the right to have an attorney present or review things before you sign or say anything official.

  • 22
    daring-grouse-931

    I just want to gently say — please take care of yourself physically right now too. Acute trauma and shock affect the body, not just the mind. You may not be sleeping, eating, or thinking clearly and that's completely normal after something like this. If the anxiety is becoming overwhelming, please reach out to a doctor or crisis line. You cannot handle what's ahead if you're running on empty and self-blame alone.

  • 22
    gentle-kestrel-344

    From the insurance side of things — when an injury is potentially catastrophic like a spinal injury, the claims process moves differently than a fender-bender. There will be an independent investigation, possibly an accident reconstruction specialist. Everything about the scene, the vehicles, witness statements gets examined carefully. This isn't meant to scare you, just to say: be methodical. Keep every document you receive. Don't throw anything away. And seriously, let your insurance company know you want a defense attorney involved as early as possible.

  • 13
    sharp-grouse-152

    I don't have any practical advice but I just want to say — you reaching out here shows you're not a bad person. Bad people don't sit up at night consumed by guilt over someone they hurt. Accidents are called accidents for a reason. Please be gentle with yourself while you figure out the next steps.

  • 15
    sharp-owl-812

    Okay, practical steps: (1) Call your insurance company if you haven't already. (2) Do not post anything about this on any social media platform — delete recent posts if there are any. (3) Get a consultation with a criminal defense attorney this week, not next week. (4) Write down everything you remember about the accident in detail and give it only to that attorney. The guilt is real and valid but it won't help you right now — being organized and protected will.

  • 12
    keen-otter-248

    I don't want to pile on but I do want to ask — do you actually know the extent of the other driver's injuries yet, or are you going off what you overheard at the scene? Because paramedics and first responders sometimes say things in the moment that don't reflect the final diagnosis. I'm not saying minimize it, just — don't let worst-case assumptions spiral you before you have real information. What has your insurance company actually told you so far?

  • 24
    spry-stoat-766

    The citation you received right now is a traffic infraction, but you're right that serious injury can trigger a DA review for potential criminal charges depending on your state. That process usually takes weeks or even months to play out. In the meantime, the civil lawsuit risk is real and that's where your liability coverage comes in. If your limits are low and the injuries are severe, there's a possibility of a judgment beyond your coverage — that's called being 'exposed' — which is another reason to get legal counsel involved early so you understand your actual risk picture.

    • 4
      soft-spoken-mile-marker566

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 10
    spry-heron-245

    I know this feels unsurvivable right now. It's not. People have been exactly where you are and come through it. The fact that you're taking this seriously, feeling remorse, asking for help — that matters. Take it one step at a time. First call your insurer. Then find an attorney to at least consult with. Then breathe. You can do this.