The Shoulder
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Legal questionscool-vole-847

Debt collector threatening lawsuit over accident I might not have even caused — what do I do?

So I've been sitting on this for months and I'm finally losing sleep over it, so here goes.

About a year and a half ago I got into an intersection collision. I was going straight on what I'm almost certain was my green light, and the other car came through from a cross street. We both told the responding officer the same thing — that we had the green. It was one of those genuinely confusing situations where I still don't know what actually happened.

Here's the part I'm embarrassed about: I didn't have insurance at the time. I know, I know. I was young and broke and kept telling myself nothing bad would happen. Well. It did. I've had insurance ever since and I will never let it lapse again, lesson absolutely learned the hard way.

Because I was uninsured I panicked and told the officer I was at fault, even though I genuinely wasn't sure. He actually seemed skeptical — he didn't cite me for the collision itself, only minor stuff, and he suggested I try to pull the intersection camera footage. I contacted the city and they told me only an attorney could request it. I didn't hire one. Another mistake.

Fast forward a few months: I get a letter from a collections agency saying I owe a pretty significant chunk of money on behalf of the other driver's insurance company for their vehicle damage and related costs. I wrote back asking for documentation. They came back offering to settle for roughly half if I paid within 30 days. I couldn't do it, offered what I could actually afford, they went silent for almost a year.

Now they're back. Same energy. Threatening legal action if I don't settle. I don't know if they're bluffing or if I'm about to get served.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Do I actually need a lawyer now, or is there still room to negotiate on my own?

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13 replies

  • 16
    candid-stoat-297

    I went through something weirdly similar — uninsured, intersection accident, spent months trying to handle the collections stuff myself before I finally talked to an attorney. The moment I got actual legal help the whole dynamic shifted. The collectors were way more willing to actually negotiate when they knew someone was in my corner who understood the process. I'm not saying you have to hire someone, but even a free consultation changed how I saw my options.

  • 17
    humble-dove-273

    That 'pay half within 30 days or else' move is a classic pressure tactic. They went silent for a year because they were hoping you'd either forget about it or panic when they resurfaced. Don't make any decisions out of fear. Get some information first before you hand over anything.

    • 3
      curious-survivor845

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

  • 7
    silent-raven-780

    Okay so from the inside, here's what's likely happening: the insurance company already paid out on the other driver's claim and now they're trying to recover that through subrogation. They handed it to a collections agency because pursuing it themselves isn't cost-effective. That agency works on contingency or buys the debt at a discount — meaning there's almost always more room to negotiate than their letters imply. The 'we'll sue you' threat is real but usually a last resort, not a first one. They want a check, not a courtroom.

    • 6
      patient-passenger139

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 21
    quick-finch-504

    A few things worth knowing: subrogation claims do have statutes of limitations that vary by state, so depending on when the accident actually happened and what state you're in, the clock may matter here. Also, your admission of fault to an officer doesn't automatically settle civil liability — those are different things. If there's any chance the intersection camera footage still exists, an attorney could potentially still request it, though older footage gets overwritten fast. Worth asking during a consultation whether that's even viable at this point.

  • 17
    candid-crow-317

    Not legal advice, but I'd strongly suggest at least a free consult with a personal injury attorney before you respond to them again. The fact that fault was genuinely disputed, that you were skeptically cited, and that footage may have existed changes the picture compared to a clear-cut at-fault situation. Some PI attorneys handle these kinds of defense consultations or can point you toward someone who does. Going in blind against a collections agency that does this every day is a tough spot to be in.

    • 20
      quiet-stoat-954

      I just want to check in — how are you holding up with all of this? Financial stress from accident fallout is genuinely traumatic and I see people in care all the time who are dealing with lingering anxiety from situations like yours long after the physical stuff resolves. Please make sure you're taking care of yourself through this, not just the legal side of it.

  • 6
    keen-beaver-067

    Stop responding to their letters on your own. Every response you've sent has basically kept the negotiation alive on their terms. If you can't pay what they're asking and you're not sure you were even at fault, the next move should be talking to someone who does this professionally — not firing off another counter-offer that they can ignore for another year.

    • 7
      hopeful-walker772

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

  • 16
    calm-mole-821

    Quick question — when you say the officer 'didn't cite you for the collision,' do you mean no fault-related citations at all, or just that the ticket was for something minor like a registration issue? That distinction might matter more than you think. Also, do you know for sure the footage is gone, or did you just never get a lawyer to formally request it?

    • 4
      tired-passenger337

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

  • 14
    calm-mole-888

    Honestly the fact that you've made it this long without being formally sued is actually meaningful. If they had an airtight case they probably would have moved on it already. That doesn't mean you should ignore it, but it does suggest you might have more leverage than their letters are letting on.