The Shoulder
The Shoulder
58
daring-lynx-077

Debris fell off a truck on the freeway, my car rolled, now I can't walk or pay rent — what do I do?

I don't even know how to start this. About six weeks ago I was on the interstate heading home from a long shift when a massive chunk of lumber — looked like it fell off a flatbed — appeared out of nowhere in my lane. I swerved, clipped the median, and my car rolled twice before landing on the shoulder.

I survived but my body is wrecked. Herniated discs in my lower back, a fractured rib, and nerve damage in my left leg that makes it nearly impossible to stand for more than a few minutes. I was a delivery driver — that was my whole income. Now I can't drive, can't stand, can't lift anything. That job is just... gone.

The truck that lost the lumber never stopped. Nobody got plates. I've talked to the highway patrol and they basically shrugged. There were other cars around me when it happened and I keep hoping someone saw something but I have no way to find those witnesses.

Meanwhile:

  • My car is totaled and I'm still making payments on it
  • I'm behind on rent and my landlord is not being patient
  • Medical bills are already showing up and I have no idea how I'll handle them
  • I've been having panic attacks every time I get near a highway
  • Honestly some days I'm in a really dark place mentally and I don't feel like myself at all

I have basic liability-only insurance. I don't even know if there's anything I can do legally when the person who caused this just drove away. Does anyone here have experience with something like this? Hit-and-run with a phantom driver? I feel completely trapped and I just need to hear from people who've been through something similar.

13replies

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

13 replies

  • 9
    plain-marmot-033

    Oh my god, I could have written parts of this myself. A van lost a ladder on the highway near me two years ago — I dodged it and got rear-ended by the car behind me in the process. The original vehicle never stopped either. What I learned is that even when the at-fault driver disappears, your own insurance policy might still have an uninsured motorist clause that covers exactly this kind of thing — a phantom driver who causes a crash and flees. It's worth digging into your policy documents tonight even if you only have basic coverage. Mine had it and I had no idea.

  • 16
    clear-crow-859

    Not legal advice, but this is worth knowing: in a lot of states, a hit-and-run or 'phantom vehicle' situation where debris falls from an unidentified vehicle can still be pursued through your own UM/UIM (uninsured motorist) coverage even without identifying the other driver. Some states require physical contact, others don't — so the specifics of your state matter a lot here. The fact that you were a professional driver and lost your income is also significant for damages. Honestly this is the kind of situation where a free consult with a PI attorney is really worth your time, just to understand your options. Most won't charge you anything upfront.

  • 18
    spry-beaver-144

    Whatever you do, be really careful about what you say to any insurance company right now — yours OR anyone else's. They will absolutely use casual wording against you later. 'I felt okay at the scene' type stuff. Don't give recorded statements without understanding what you're agreeing to first. Adjusters are trained to wrap things up fast and cheap.

    • 16
      steady-marten-452

      I know it probably feels impossible to see anything positive right now and I'm not going to pretend this isn't brutal. But the fact that you're here, asking questions, trying to figure out a path forward — that matters. People have come back from situations that looked this hopeless. You have a legitimate case to explore and people in your corner even if it doesn't feel like it. One step at a time.

  • 11
    careful-finch-267

    Former claims adjuster here. The uninsured motorist angle others mentioned is real — I processed these cases. What will matter a lot is whether you filed a police report immediately naming this as a hit-and-run involving road debris. If you did, that documentation is crucial. If there's any gap or if it was filed vaguely, it can complicate things. Also — dashcam footage from ANY nearby vehicle, including other drivers or even highway cameras, can sometimes be subpoenaed. Don't assume there's nothing out there. That footage disappears fast though so if you're going to try, act now.

  • 10
    swift-elk-307

    Please don't neglect the mental health piece of this. What you're describing — the panic attacks near highways, the dark thoughts, not feeling like yourself — that's not weakness, that's trauma. PTSD after a serious crash is incredibly common and it's a real injury just like your back. If you have any access to a counselor or even a crisis line right now, please use it. Your brain went through something catastrophic. It needs care too, not just your spine.

    • 1
      weary-neighbor651

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 5
    silent-beaver-247

    I'm so sorry. Reading this made my chest tight. You didn't do anything wrong — you were just driving home — and now your whole life is upended. Please talk to someone today if the dark thoughts get heavier. You matter and none of this is your fault. Sending you so much strength right now.

    • 0
      gentle-traveler692

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

  • 14
    spry-mole-892

    Okay practical stuff: 1) Call your auto insurance TODAY and use the words 'uninsured motorist claim' and 'hit and run.' See what they say. 2) Do NOT accept any quick settlement offer from anyone until you fully understand the extent of your injuries — back and nerve stuff can get worse over time. 3) Free PI consultations are genuinely free, no strings. Talk to at least two or three before deciding anything. 4) If you have any kind of dashcam footage at all, back it up somewhere right now. Don't wait on any of this.

    • 6
      steady-neighbor650

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

  • 12
    steady-finch-712

    One thing people overlook in debris cases: if you have any information at all about the type of truck or cargo — even a partial description — there may be ways to identify the company through freight manifests, toll records, or traffic camera requests. Law enforcement often won't chase this aggressively on their own but a PI attorney's investigator sometimes will. Also, keep every single bill, every medical record, every receipt, every piece of paper related to this. A folder, a shoebox, whatever. Documentation is everything in these cases.

  • 14
    patient-swan-326

    Just want to ask — did any other drivers stop at the scene? Even if nobody got the truck's plates, witness statements from people who saw the debris or the rollover could be really valuable. Did the police interview anyone at the scene, or was it just you? Also what state are you in? UM coverage rules vary a lot and it changes what your options look like.