The Shoulder
The Shoulder
52
cool-sparrow-139

Debris flew off a flatbed and I wrecked my car. Now I'm terrified of what comes next.

I'm still shaking writing this, honestly. Two days ago I was driving on the highway when a bunch of loose lumber came flying off a flatbed truck in front of me. I swerved hard to avoid it and ended up spinning out and hitting the median barrier. Airbags went off. I sat there for probably 10 minutes just... not moving. A stranger eventually knocked on my window and helped me get to the shoulder.

Here's where it gets complicated:

  • I do have insurance but my deductible is really high and I'm already living paycheck to paycheck
  • The flatbed truck just kept going — I never got a plate number, I was too disoriented
  • My car is technically drivable but makes a horrible grinding noise and the whole front end looks pushed in
  • I didn't go to the ER because I was scared of the bill, even though my head was pounding for the rest of the day

I filed a police report yesterday. The officer said because there's no other driver to pin it on, my own collision coverage would have to handle the car. That felt like a gut punch.

What I can't figure out is whether the truck driver could somehow still be tracked down and held responsible — like through traffic cameras or witnesses — or if I'm just stuck eating this on my own. Has anyone been through something like this? Especially the "debris from another vehicle" situation where they drove off?

Also genuinely worried about my head. How long is too long to wait before getting checked out? I don't want to make things worse by going to the doctor late if this ever becomes a claim.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 18
    bold-stoat-375

    A couple of practical things worth knowing: First, highway and traffic cameras are often managed by the state DOT, and footage gets overwritten fast — sometimes within 30-72 hours. If you haven't already, it might be worth calling the non-emergency line for the highway patrol and asking whether any cameras cover that section of road. Second, the police report is good, but if you remember anything about the truck — color, rough size, any company logo, partial plate — document it now while it's fresh, even just in your phone notes. That detail could matter a lot later.

  • 17
    plain-dove-543

    This happened to me almost exactly — gravel off a dump truck, I swerved, hit a guardrail, driver was long gone. It felt so unfair because it 100% wasn't my fault but I had nothing to go after. What ended up helping me was that a few people had dashcams and one of them actually caught partial footage of the truck. Worth posting in any local Facebook groups or NextDoor asking if anyone was on that stretch of road. You'd be surprised.

    • 6
      hopeful-wanderer723

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

  • 16
    calm-mole-232

    I just want to say — I'm really sorry. That sounds absolutely terrifying and you were completely alone dealing with it. The practical stuff will hopefully get sorted out but don't underestimate how much something like this can shake you. Be gentle with yourself this week.

    • 8
      kind-traveler812

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

  • 12
    careful-hare-922

    So from the inside — debris-from-another-vehicle claims are genuinely tricky. If the truck is never identified, your insurer will process it under your collision coverage (with your deductible). BUT if law enforcement or you can later identify that truck driver, you can potentially pursue their liability coverage and get your deductible back through subrogation. Your insurer might actually do some of that work on your behalf. Ask them directly: "Will you subrogate if the at-fault driver is identified later?" A good adjuster will say yes. Don't let them close the file in a way that kills that option.

  • 10
    warm-elk-800

    Not legal advice, but this kind of scenario — unidentified vehicle causes an accident, victim has damages and possible injuries — is exactly the type of situation where a free consultation with a PI attorney is worth your time. Some states have uninsured motorist provisions that can cover situations involving hit-and-run or phantom vehicles even when there's no contact. Whether that applies to you depends on your policy and your state. Worth a conversation before you assume you're stuck. Most PI attorneys don't charge for that initial call.

    • 5
      patient-passenger566

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

  • 9
    gentle-wren-129

    Please don't wait too long on the head thing. Seriously. A headache after an airbag deployment and a hard impact can be totally benign — or it can be a sign of something that needs attention. I'm not trying to scare you, but "I'll wait and see" after a possible concussion isn't always the right call. A lot of urgent cares will work out a payment plan, and if you do end up having a valid injury claim, medical records from right after the accident are genuinely important. The gap in treatment can hurt you later even if you felt okay-ish.

    • 8
      honest-optimist126

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 8
    kind-beaver-686

    Be really careful about how you describe the accident when you talk to your insurance company. Adjusters are trained to listen for anything that sounds like driver error — even though swerving to avoid debris is a completely normal, reasonable thing to do. Don't volunteer extra details. Answer what they ask, keep it factual, and don't let them reframe what happened.

  • 6
    cool-wolf-867

    Three things right now: 1) Get your head checked, figure out payment later. 2) Write down every single thing you remember about that truck tonight. 3) Don't drive the car again until someone who knows what they're looking at tells you it's safe — "drivable" and "safe" are not the same thing when the front end is pushed in.