The Shoulder
The Shoulder
46
clever-tern-758

Cop told us not to swap info at the scene — now I'm just sitting here with a case number?

So I got rear-ended at a stoplight two days ago. Nothing catastrophic but my bumper is pretty messed up and my neck has been stiff ever since. When the officer showed up he kind of took charge of the whole thing — had us both stay by our cars, collected whatever he needed, and when I asked about getting the other driver's insurance and license plate he basically waved me off and said "it'll all be in the report, don't worry about it."

I trusted him in the moment because honestly I was still shaky from the impact and not really thinking straight. But now I'm sitting here with nothing except a case number scrawled on a little card. No other driver's name, no their insurance, nothing.

Called the non-emergency line this morning and they said reports can take anywhere from a few business days to over a week depending on how backed up they are. My own insurance has the claim open but the rep I talked to said they really need the full report to move things forward with the other party.

Is this just how it works sometimes? Like do I literally just wait? And in the meantime — should I be doing anything else? Seeing a doctor even if I'm not sure how bad the stiffness is? Keeping some kind of notes?

Feel like I'm just floating right now and I hate not knowing what I'm supposed to be doing.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 17
    gentle-seal-060

    This happened to me almost exactly. Officer at my scene did the same thing — told me the report would have everything. It felt super weird leaving without the other person's info but honestly the report did come through with all of it. Took about five business days. The waiting is the worst part but it's actually pretty normal when the responding officer handles the info exchange themselves.

    • 12
      hearty-lynx-401

      Please don't brush off the neck stiffness. I've seen so many people dismiss it as minor soreness and then a week later they can barely turn their head. Whiplash symptoms can be delayed and they can escalate. Go get evaluated — urgent care works if you can't get a same-day appointment with your regular doctor. Tell them specifically that it started after a rear-end collision so they document it correctly.

    • 19
      plain-grouse-679

      One thing I'd flag — your own insurance is helpful right now but be careful about giving them a recorded statement before you know the full picture. They may ask if they can record a call and frame it as routine. You're not obligated to do that on the spot. Just something to be aware of as this moves forward.

  • 17
    kind-wolf-848

    Yes, go see a doctor. Today if you can. Neck stiffness after a rear-end can be whiplash and it sometimes gets worse before it gets better. Don't wait until you feel "bad enough" — getting checked out now also creates a medical record tied to the accident date, which matters a lot later.

    • 7
      tired-optimist346

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

  • 11
    steady-hare-959

    The case number is actually more useful than people realize — once the report is finalized you can usually request it online or in person with just that number and a small fee. While you're waiting, start a simple running notes document: date and time of the crash, what the officer said, who you've called and when, and a daily note about any symptoms or how your neck is feeling. That kind of contemporaneous record can really help later if this turns into a bigger claim.

  • 16
    clever-lynx-635

    From my time on the inside — the waiting period for the police report is genuinely standard and your adjuster isn't stalling, they really do use it to confirm fault, get the other carrier's info, and verify the basic facts. What I'd suggest is calling your adjuster every couple of days just to stay on their radar. Claims with engaged claimants tend to move faster just because they don't sit in a queue as long.

  • 7
    brave-crane-489

    Ugh, the "just wait" feeling after an accident is so stressful. You're not overreacting by wanting to know what's going on. Hoping the report comes through quickly for you and that your neck feels better soon 💙

    • 10
      quiet-passenger487

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 8
    daring-stoat-700

    Not legal advice, but the documentation habit the paralegal mentioned is genuinely one of the most valuable things you can do right now. If your neck issues linger or turn into something more serious, having a clear paper trail from day one — including that the officer instructed you not to exchange info — can matter. Also worth knowing that in most states you have a few years to pursue a personal injury claim, so don't feel pressured to rush into anything before you understand the extent of what you're dealing with.