The Shoulder
The Shoulder
70
hearty-wolf-439

Cop sided with the driver who hit me — dashcam tells a different story. Am I screwed?

So I'm still kind of in shock about how this whole thing went down and honestly need some outside perspective from people who've been through something similar.

I was stopped at a red light when I got rear-ended. The driver who hit me immediately started telling the responding officer that she had been pushed into me by the car behind her — basically doing the whole blame-deflection thing in real time. The officer seemed to take her side pretty quickly, and the report honestly reads like I'm barely even a victim in this.

Here's the thing though: I have a dashcam with a rear-facing lens. When I watched the footage back at home, there's a pretty clear gap of time between when the car behind her made contact with her and when she actually rolled into me. Like it wasn't a chain-reaction push — she had time and space to stop. She just... didn't.

Now I'm finding out she either has no insurance or let her policy lapse. So I'm sitting here with a messed-up neck, a car that needs real work, and a police report that doesn't reflect what actually happened.

Questions I can't stop thinking about:

  • Does dashcam footage actually matter at this point, or is the police report basically gospel?
  • Can I dispute the police report somehow?
  • If she's truly uninsured, is my only option going through my own uninsured motorist coverage — assuming I even have it?
  • Is there any point in talking to a lawyer when there might not be money to recover anyway?

I'm not a legal person at all, I just want to understand if I have any real options here or if I should just accept the loss. Any experience with something like this would really help right now.

16replies

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16 replies

  • 5
    calm-owl-488

    I went through something almost identical last year — the other driver gave the cop a whole story and the report came out completely wrong. What saved me was exactly what you have: footage. I submitted it to my own insurance company and they actually flagged it as contradicting the official report. It's not gospel, I promise. Push back on that report.

    • 2
      grounded-late-shift375

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

    • 10
      quiet-optimist655

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 14
    bold-dove-078

    Police reports are actually not automatically admissible as fact in civil cases — they're just one piece of evidence. You can formally request an amendment to the report by contacting the officer's department and submitting your dashcam footage as a supplement. It doesn't always work, but it creates a paper trail showing the documented version of events is disputed. Also, start preserving everything right now: save the raw footage files in multiple places, screenshot the timestamps, and don't just rely on a clip — keep the full original file.

    • 13
      calm-stoat-972

      Ugh, this is so stressful and I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The fact that you even have rear-facing dashcam footage feels like a lucky break in a really unlucky situation. Don't let anyone tell you it doesn't matter before they've actually seen it. You deserve to be made whole here.

  • 11
    mellow-raven-961

    Whatever you do, be really careful about how you talk to any insurance adjuster — including your own. They will absolutely use a statement you give them to minimize your payout. Don't describe your injuries as 'minor' or say you 'feel okay' just to be polite. Let the footage do the talking and keep your words short until you know where you stand.

    • 13
      bold-badger-649

      Former claims adjuster here. Honestly? Dashcam footage changes everything on the inside of an insurance investigation, even when the police report says something different. If your footage shows a clear gap between impacts, a decent adjuster will recognize that the second driver had an independent duty to stop. The police report is a starting point for us, not the ending point. File a claim with your own UM/UIM coverage if you have it and specifically tell them you have footage — get it in front of them early.

    • 8
      weathered-mile-marker951

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 20
    genuine-crane-359

    Not legal advice, but I'd really encourage you to at least do a free consultation with a PI attorney before you assume there's nothing to recover. Even in uninsured situations there are sometimes angles people don't think of — your own UM coverage, potential liability for the other car that started the chain, etc. The footage you're describing sounds like it could be genuinely meaningful. Don't give up before someone with actual case experience looks at the full picture.

    • 2
      hopeful-survivor745

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

  • 13
    daring-finch-717

    Please go get checked out if you haven't already, even if your neck just feels stiff and not 'bad enough' for the ER. Soft tissue injuries from rear-end collisions are notorious for feeling manageable in the first 48 hours and then ramping up significantly after inflammation sets in. Get it documented medically NOW — a gap in care between the accident and your first medical visit is something that will absolutely come up later if you pursue any kind of claim.

  • 19
    calm-dove-013

    Check your own policy tonight. Like right now. Look for 'uninsured motorist' or 'UM/UIM' coverage. If you have it, that's your most direct path forward. If you don't have it, file that away as a lesson for renewal time. Either way, that dashcam footage is your most valuable asset right now — treat it like cash.

    • 10
      calm-rider588

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

    • 4
      mellow-offramp378

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

  • 19
    silent-elk-883

    I don't want to be harsh but I'm curious — how long is the 'gap' you're describing on the footage? Like are we talking two full seconds or more like a half second? Because that actually matters a lot for the 'she had time to stop' argument. A fraction of a second probably won't move the needle, but genuine reaction-time footage could. Have you had anyone else watch it to confirm your read on it, or are you watching it while stressed and hoping?

    • 7
      careful-neighbor500

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.