The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
clever-finch-114

Cop told me the other driver was insured — police report says otherwise. Now what??

I'm honestly still in shock and I don't even know where to start with this.

About three weeks ago I was rear-ended at a stoplight on my way to work. Pretty violent hit — pushed me into the intersection. The guy who hit me was driving erratically and the whole thing felt like he was fleeing from something, though I never got the full story. Police showed up fast, got everyone's info, and the officer on scene actually looked me in the eye and said "don't worry, he's got coverage." I remember feeling relieved because I only carry the minimum on my truck — I've had it for years, paid it off, and just never upgraded my policy.

Fast forward to this week. I finally got access to the police report and I'm reading through the charges listed against this guy. Driving without insurance is literally one of them. I don't know if the officer misread something at the scene, or if the guy showed him a fake card, or what — but I feel completely blindsided.

My truck is almost certainly a total loss. I've sunk a lot into keeping it in good shape over the years. And now I'm being told by my own insurer that since I only have liability, there's nothing they can do for the vehicle damage.

I have some soft tissue stuff going on with my neck and lower back that I'm getting checked out, but I'm most panicked about the car situation right now.

Has anyone been through something like this? Is there any path forward when the at-fault driver has literally nothing? Do I just eat the loss on the truck? I feel like I did everything right and I'm still the one getting screwed here.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 21
    keen-dove-347

    Oh man, this happened to me almost exactly. Different circumstances but same gut-punch moment of reading the police report and realizing what the officer told me at the scene was just wrong. It's such a specific kind of betrayal because you trusted the process and it failed you. I ended up having to go after the at-fault driver personally through small claims. It's slow and painful but it's something.

    • 5
      curious-commuter458

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 15
    candid-grouse-514

    First thing — do NOT let your own insurance company close the file on you just because you only have liability. Push them on whether your state requires uninsured motorist coverage to be offered to you in writing when you sign up. In a lot of states, if they didn't get your signature explicitly declining UM coverage, you might actually have it and not know it. Dig out your original policy documents.

  • 21
    wise-raven-645

    Former adjuster here. The officer almost certainly saw an insurance card at the scene — a lot of uninsured drivers carry expired cards or straight-up fake ones and it's hard to verify on the spot. It's not really the cop's fault, but it does leave you in a terrible spot.

    Here's the practical reality from the inside: your insurer has very little incentive to help you beyond your actual coverage. That said, definitely ask them to pull your original policy application because UM/UIM waiver documentation varies a lot. Sometimes people have coverage they forgot they opted into.

    • 15
      candid-marmot-137

      Not legal advice, but a few angles are worth exploring with an actual attorney: (1) the UM coverage documentation question others mentioned, (2) whether any third party shares liability — like if the other driver was in a company vehicle or had just left a business, (3) a direct civil claim against the driver personally. A lot of PI attorneys will do a free consult and some work on contingency even for cases like this. Worth at least one conversation.

    • 4
      gentle-wanderer768

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

  • 14
    quick-wolf-838

    A couple things worth knowing: even without insurance, the at-fault driver is still personally liable for your damages. You can sue them in civil court regardless of whether they have insurance. The harder question is whether they have assets to collect from — but a judgment is still a judgment and can follow someone for a long time.

    Also, look into whether your state has an uninsured motorist fund or guarantee fund for exactly these situations. Not every state has one but some do, and it's worth a quick search.

  • 18
    kind-grouse-954

    Please don't let the car stuff overshadow the neck and back symptoms. Soft tissue injuries from rear-end impacts can look totally manageable in the first few weeks and then flare up significantly later. Get imaging done now while everything is still in that acute window — it matters a lot for documenting what happened to your body, not just your truck.

    • 0
      gentle-walker572

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 14
    silent-seal-710

    Brutal situation. Honest take: get the UM coverage question answered first because that's your fastest potential path to vehicle compensation. If that's a dead end, talk to a lawyer about a civil suit. And going forward — I know it costs more — but add UM/UIM to whatever you drive next. This exact scenario is why it exists.

    • 0
      tired-commuter831

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 8
    steady-lynx-975

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this. You did everything right — you called 911, you waited for the report, you trusted what the officer told you. The fact that you're now holding the bag for someone else's illegal behavior is genuinely infuriating. I hope you find a path through this. Don't give up and don't let them brush you off.

    • 6
      grounded-overpass690

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