The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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humble-dove-020

Cited for reckless driving but I just zoned out — can I fight the charge?

So I was in a fender-bender last month in a construction zone. Traffic was crawling, I glanced down for maybe two seconds, and by the time I looked up the van ahead of me had stopped completely. I braked but couldn't stop in time. Minor damage, nobody seriously hurt, thank goodness.

The responding officer cited me for reckless driving, which honestly feels way off base. I've had a clean record for 18 years. I wasn't racing, I wasn't road-raging, I wasn't drunk — I just lost focus for a split second. Classic distracted driving. That's it.

The officer mentioned I could contest the citation in court. I really want to stand in front of a judge and say, 'Look, I wasn't being reckless — I was inattentive. Can we call it what it actually was?' Because a reckless driving conviction follows you around hard — insurance, background checks, potentially even my commercial driving certification if I'm reading this right.

My questions:

1. Is it even worth going before a judge to ask for a charge reduction to something like inattentive or careless driving? 2. Could arguing it backfire and actually land me with a bigger fine or worse consequences? 3. Has anyone successfully gotten a charge like this reduced just by showing up and being honest about what happened?

I'm not trying to dodge accountability — I caused the accident and I feel terrible about it. I just don't think 'reckless' accurately describes what happened, and I don't want a charge that could haunt me for years over one bad moment. Any experiences or thoughts appreciated.

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11 replies

  • 20
    swift-lynx-816

    Whatever happens in court, watch out for how your insurer handles this. Even if the charge gets reduced, they may still rate you based on the accident itself, not the citation. Don't assume a win in court means your premium stays flat. Call your agent after court, not before — you don't want to trigger a review prematurely.

    • 7
      mellow-sidewalk289

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 17
    warm-bison-141

    From the inside: reckless driving flags get noticed fast when your policy renews. Some carriers have automatic surcharge triggers tied to specific charge codes. If you can get this reduced to careless or inattentive, it may fall into a completely different bucket in the system — lower surcharge tier, sometimes none at all depending on the carrier. It's genuinely worth fighting for, not just for your ego but for your wallet over the next 3-5 years.

  • 13
    hearty-bison-161

    I was in almost the exact same situation a couple years back — cited for something that sounded way more dramatic than what actually went down. I did go to court and asked the judge to consider a lesser charge. She appreciated that I came in person, took responsibility, and had a clean record. It didn't go perfectly but the charge was reduced. Definitely worth showing up.

    • 22
      steady-vole-519

      Not legal advice, but generally speaking — reckless driving and careless/inattentive driving are often treated very differently in the eyes of the law and by insurers. Reckless typically implies willful disregard for safety, while inattentive is more about a lapse in judgment. Judges do have discretion to reduce charges, especially when someone has a clean record and accepts responsibility. Showing up matters. Having documentation of your driving history helps. Talk to an attorney before you go in, even just for a quick consult.

    • 6
      clever-crane-967

      Go to court. Worst realistic outcome is the charge stays as-is, which is where you are now anyway. Best outcome is a reduction. Bring your record, dress like you have somewhere important to be, and be short and honest. Don't over-explain or get defensive. Judges have heard every excuse — just own your moment of inattention and let your 18 clean years speak.

    • 6
      tired-neighbor637

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 12
    quiet-wren-347

    What does the citation paperwork actually say — is it a specific statute or just a general description? And was there a dashcam involved, either yours or the other vehicle's? That could cut both ways. Also, what state are you in? 'Reckless driving' thresholds vary a lot by jurisdiction and some places it's almost a default charge for any at-fault accident in a construction zone.

    • 1
      careful-parent966

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 10
    clever-badger-969

    A few practical things: pull the exact statute you were cited under and look up the elements required to prove 'reckless' in your state. If one of those elements is willfulness or conscious disregard, that's your opening — a two-second distraction is hard to frame as willful. Bring your driving record to court, printed and clean. Judges notice when someone does their homework.

  • 5
    mellow-newt-062

    I'm really glad no one was seriously hurt. And I think you're being really hard on yourself — one distracted moment after 18 years doesn't make you a reckless driver. I hope the judge sees that too. Rooting for you.