The Shoulder
The Shoulder
74
Car accidentsbright-marten-713

Cop blamed me 100% for a left-turn crash but the other driver had to be speeding — is that really how it works?

Still shaking a little writing this out, honestly.

I was pulling out of a shopping center last week, making a left onto the main road. I checked both directions, saw a car way down the road — like, way down — and figured I had more than enough time to clear. Started my turn, almost completely through it, and that car absolutely plowed into my rear quarter panel. I spun halfway around. Airbags didn't deploy but my neck and back are already stiffening up.

Officer shows up, talks to both of us, and writes the report basically pinning it all on me for the left turn. No ticket for the other driver. Nothing.

Here's my thing though — I've driven that road hundreds of times. The speed limit is 40 mph. There is no way that car covered that distance in the time it took me to turn unless they were going significantly faster than that. The damage tells a story too: they got me on the very back of my car, which means I was almost done with the turn. If I'd truly cut them off, wouldn't they have hit the front or middle of my car?

I only carry liability — no collision coverage on my end — so my own insurance isn't going to fix my car. It's probably totaled.

I'm not trying to dodge responsibility if I messed up. But it doesn't feel like the whole picture. Does the other driver's speed matter at all legally? Can I push back on the police report somehow? Is there any point in even talking to a lawyer when I'm the one who got cited?

Any advice from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now.

11replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

11 replies

  • 20
    brave-stoat-776

    I went through almost this exact thing two years ago — left turn, I thought I had plenty of gap, end up getting hit in the rear bumper. Officer blamed me on the spot too. What saved me was a traffic camera mounted on a utility pole nearby that nobody mentioned at the scene. Ended up showing the other driver was going nearly 20 over. The police report isn't the final word, I promise you. Start looking for any cameras in the area ASAP before footage gets overwritten.

    • 8
      tidy-wren-818

      Do NOT call the other driver's insurance and just start explaining yourself. I know it feels like the natural thing to do — you want to tell your side — but adjusters are trained to get you talking in ways that lock in fault on their end. Let them contact you first, and keep it short when they do. Every word you say is being logged.

  • 9
    wise-elk-172

    Former adjuster here. The point-of-impact thing you mentioned — them hitting your rear — actually matters more than people realize. When I was reviewing claims, rear-quarter hits on the turning vehicle were almost always flagged for a speed analysis because it suggests the turning car was nearly through the intersection. It doesn't automatically get you off the hook, but it's a legitimate factor that a good appraiser or reconstructionist would weigh. The initial police report assigns fault based on what the officer sees and hears in like 20 minutes. It's not gospel.

  • 15
    bright-seal-045

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: comparative fault (or contributory negligence depending on your state) is a real thing, and speeding by the other party can absolutely reduce or offset your percentage of fault. The police report is evidence, not a verdict. If the other driver was exceeding the speed limit, that's negligence on their part too. Worth at least a free consultation with a PI attorney before you assume you're 100% on the hook. Most won't charge you anything just to talk.

  • 13
    curious-crow-237

    Please go get checked out today if you haven't already. Neck and back stiffness after a spin like that can be whiplash or worse, and symptoms often peak 24-72 hours after the crash, not immediately. A lot of people skip the ER because they feel 'okay enough' and then struggle to connect their injuries to the accident later when they're dealing with insurance or a claim. Document everything now.

    • 1
      gentle-neighbor383

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 15
    brave-tern-123

    A few practical steps: First, write down everything you remember right now — time, weather, traffic, exactly where that other car was when you started your turn, any landmarks. Memory fades fast. Second, file a public records request for the full police report and any dashcam footage from patrol cars. Third, check Google Street View and Google Maps satellite for any cameras along that stretch — businesses, traffic signals, ATMs. Evidence gathering in the first week is really critical.

    • 5
      kind-commuter342

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 8
    spry-badger-903

    I don't want to be harsh but I'm curious — when you say the other car was 'way down the road,' how far are we actually talking? Like a full city block? Half? Because perception of distance at speed is honestly really tricky, especially when you're focused on completing a turn. I'm not saying you're wrong, just that this detail is going to matter a lot if it ever goes anywhere legally.

  • 16
    mellow-dove-899

    The fact that you're asking these questions and not just rolling over is honestly a good sign. A lot of people in your spot just assume the cop's report is the end of the story and eat the loss. It's not. You might have more options than you think, especially if that other driver was speeding.

  • 18
    hearty-seal-998

    I'm so sorry this happened to you. The physical stuff aside, the emotional whiplash of being told it's your fault when you genuinely felt like you did everything right — that's its own kind of awful. Please don't carry this alone. Talk to someone, whether that's a lawyer, a friend, whoever. You deserve to have your side of things actually looked at.