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Insurancehumble-dove-880

Driver handed me a fake insurance card — cops are now asking if I want to press charges

Still kind of in shock this is even a thing that happens.

About a month ago someone ran a red light and clipped the front corner of my car pretty badly. When we pulled over and exchanged info, the guy handed me an insurance card. Seemed normal, we went our separate ways. When I went to file a claim, the insurer told me that policy had been cancelled something like six months earlier. Card was completely bogus.

I ended up going through my own insurance to get the ball rolling, and they actually tracked down an active policy tied to the vehicle through the registration. So that process is moving — slowly, but moving. My adjuster says they're waiting on the other carrier to respond.

Here's where it gets weird: the other driver stopped responding to my texts the second I started asking for real insurance info. I have the whole conversation saved. Then yesterday a detective called me out of nowhere and said they're building a case around the false-information angle and want to know if I want to participate. They mentioned it could mean traffic charges AND a criminal charge for providing fraudulent documents.

Apparently my part would just be showing up to confirm what happened and maybe verify the texts? Honestly I don't know what I want to do. Part of me just wants the car fixed and to move on. But another part of me is like… this guy just handed me a fake insurance card without blinking. He probably does this all the time.

Has anyone been through something like this? Does pressing charges actually affect your civil claim in any way, or are they totally separate tracks? Any real-world experience appreciated.

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10 replies

  • 19
    hearty-wren-548

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking the criminal case and your civil/insurance claim run on completely separate tracks. Cooperating with police doesn't help or hurt your claim in most situations. That said, if this ever escalated to a lawsuit, a criminal conviction or guilty plea by the other driver could be useful context. Worth a quick free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your options — most will talk to you for free.

    • 9
      kind-survivor592

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 18
    daring-seal-210

    Did your insurer confirm in writing that they found the active policy? And have you gotten a formal denial letter from the bogus insurer? Just making sure you have a clean paper trail before this gets more complicated. Sometimes 'we found a policy' verbally from an adjuster and actually having that confirmed are two different things.

  • 15
    cool-kestrel-962

    The two processes — criminal charges and your insurance claim — really are separate. Cooperating with the detective's investigation doesn't obligate you to anything on the civil/insurance side, and vice versa. One thing worth asking the detective: will you need to appear in court in person, or can your statement and the text records handle most of it? That might help you decide if the time commitment feels worth it to you.

    • 1
      kind-walker345

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

  • 10
    daring-swift-604

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me two years ago. Different details but same vibe — fake card, radio silence after the fact, then cops calling me weeks later. I did agree to cooperate and honestly it wasn't a big deal. I think I gave a short recorded statement and that was it. The civil stuff with insurance moved on its own timeline and wasn't really affected. For me it was worth doing just because the guy was clearly a repeat offender type.

    • 21
      keen-newt-133

      Keep those texts backed up in multiple places RIGHT NOW. Screenshots, email them to yourself, whatever. Insurance companies and prosecutors both love documentary evidence like that, and you don't want to be scrambling for them later. Also — don't assume your own insurer is fully in your corner here. They have their own interests. Just stay organized and keep copies of everything you send or receive.

    • 15
      clear-seal-316

      Press the charges. This person handed you a fake document and then ghosted you. That's not a mistake, that's a choice. If you let it go, they'll do it to the next person. Your texts are evidence — use them.

  • 10
    humble-beaver-548

    From my time on the inside — when there's fraud involved like a fake insurance card, it actually tends to motivate the real insurer to act faster once they're identified, because they don't want the liability of their policyholder committing fraud on top of causing an accident. Your own insurer doing the legwork to find the active policy was a good sign. Just make sure you follow up every week or so. Claims can sit if nobody's nudging them.

  • 9
    candid-seal-505

    Honestly just reading this stresses me out for you. What a mess to deal with on top of already having your car damaged. I hope you're doing okay — physically too, not just the car stuff. Sometimes people focus so much on the claim that they forget to check in on how they're actually feeling after an accident.