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Dashcam clip going around — who's actually at fault here? (describe below)

So a buddy sent me this dashcam clip that's been making the rounds and honestly the comments wherever it gets posted are all over the place. I'll describe it without giving my opinion so I don't color anyone's read on it:

Highway, daytime, traffic moving at normal speed. A sedan in the left lane suddenly brakes hard — looks like there's debris or something in the road ahead of it. The SUV directly behind the sedan has almost zero reaction time and rear-ends it pretty hard. The sedan then gets pushed into the lane to the right and clips a third vehicle.

Some people watching the clip are saying the sedan is obviously at fault for braking "out of nowhere." Others are saying the SUV was following too close and that's the whole ballgame right there. A few people are even pointing fingers at whoever left the debris in the road in the first place.

I'm asking because I'm actually dealing with something similar in my own situation — not this exact clip — and I'm genuinely confused about how fault gets split when there's a chain-reaction like this. Like does the "but there was something in the road" argument actually hold up? Does following distance automatically put the rear driver on the hook?

Not looking for anyone to settle a legal case here, just curious what people who've been through accidents think when they watch something like this. What's your gut? Who do you think carries the most responsibility legally?

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10 replies

  • 20
    warm-tern-753

    I was in almost this exact setup last year — three-car chain reaction on the interstate. What I learned going through it is that fault rarely lands 100% on one person. My situation ended up being split between the driver behind me and me, even though I genuinely had no choice but to brake. Following distance is huge in how adjusters and lawyers look at these things.

  • 20
    daring-tern-880

    Spent years handling exactly these kinds of claims. Honestly, when I'd get a multi-car loss like this, my first question was always following distance and speed, full stop. The reason the lead car braked is almost secondary — drivers are expected to maintain enough space to stop for unexpected hazards. That said, if the debris was genuinely unforeseeable and the sedan had no better option, a good attorney can work with that narrative for the sedan driver. The rear driver is still in a tough spot though.

  • 20
    daring-newt-282

    Hard to really weigh in without knowing road conditions, speeds, how far back the SUV actually was, whether the sedan had working brake lights… a dashcam clip only tells part of the story. What does your situation actually involve? Is someone disputing fault with you right now or are you just trying to understand the theory?

    • 0
      tired-survivor629

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 17
    patient-tern-837

    In most states, rear-end collisions carry a rebuttable presumption of fault against the rear driver — meaning they're assumed at fault unless they can show evidence otherwise. "There was debris" can be that rebuttal, but you'd need documentation: photos of the debris, witness statements, ideally dashcam footage of the hazard itself. The chain reaction piece (sedan hitting the third car) could actually create a separate claim avenue too. Just something to keep in mind if this mirrors your case.

  • 17
    tidy-beaver-621

    Honestly just wanted to say — if you're going through something similar yourself, I hope you're doing okay. These multi-car things sound incredibly stressful to untangle. Don't let insurance companies rush you into anything while you're still figuring it all out.

  • 15
    mellow-fox-087

    Watch out — if this is related to your own claim, be careful about publicly posting your opinions on fault anywhere online. Adjusters absolutely do look at social media and forums. Not saying don't talk about it, just keep your actual case details off anything public.

  • 8
    curious-sparrow-431

    Rear driver is almost always going to take the majority of blame in a rear-end situation. That's just how it works. "I didn't have time to stop" is basically an admission you were following too close or going too fast for conditions. The debris angle is interesting but I wouldn't count on it saving anyone.

    • 17
      clever-dove-554

      Not legal advice, but from a liability standpoint these multi-vehicle scenarios usually involve comparative fault — meaning multiple parties can share percentages of responsibility. The debris in the road could potentially bring a third party into it (think: a contractor, municipality, whoever created the hazard). That's actually more common than people realize. If your own situation resembles this, it might be worth a free consult just to understand your options.

  • 7
    kind-swift-594

    The fact that there's dashcam footage at all is genuinely helpful — so many of these disputes come down to he-said-she-said with zero evidence. If your situation has any video or even good witness accounts, that's actually a better starting point than most people have.