The Shoulder
The Shoulder
50
silent-grouse-221

Driver who hit my dad was an off-duty cop — charges just quietly disappeared?

I'm still trying to wrap my head around this and honestly I'm furious.

Back in the spring, my dad was T-boned at an intersection by a guy who blew through a red light. He ended up with a fractured rib, a concussion, and spent several days in the hospital. The recovery has been slow — he's still dealing with headaches and can't do a lot of the physical stuff he used to.

When the police report came back, we found out the at-fault driver was some kind of off-duty law enforcement officer. He was apparently well over the legal limit. He got hit with multiple charges — I think there were at least four or five, including a DUI-related one.

We've been keeping an eye on the court case online, and I just checked the case status tonight. Next to the charges it now says "Nolle Prosequi" on basically everything.

I had to Google what that even means. Apparently the prosecution just... decided not to pursue it? Just like that?

I don't know if this is normal. I don't know if being in law enforcement helped him get out of this. My dad is still suffering and this guy is just walking around like nothing happened.

Does anyone know if the criminal case being dropped affects my dad's ability to still go after this guy in a civil suit? And does the fact that he was a government employee change anything about who we can even sue?

I feel like the system is protecting one of its own and my family is just left holding the bag.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 15
    spry-hare-585

    Forget the criminal case — it's done. Focus your energy on the civil side. Get the police report, the BAC results if they're in any public record, any witness statements, all medical bills and records, and get in front of a personal injury attorney. Many do free consultations. Stop watching the court docket and start building your dad's case.

  • 6
    patient-crane-995

    Just chiming in on the medical side — please make sure your dad is keeping every appointment and documenting everything. Headaches after a concussion can linger for months and sometimes get worse before they get better. If he hasn't seen a neurologist yet, that's worth pushing for. And all of that documentation — every visit, every symptom — matters enormously if this goes to a civil claim.

  • 10
    plain-kestrel-650

    Do you actually know why the charges were dropped? Sometimes prosecutors drop charges because key evidence has issues, sometimes witnesses don't cooperate, sometimes it's something procedural that has nothing to do with who the defendant is. I'm not saying favoritism isn't real — it absolutely happens — but before you assume that's what this is, it might be worth finding out if there's a public record or court filing that explains the nolle prosequi. That context could actually matter for the civil case too.

    • 10
      honest-rider795

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

  • 9
    kind-wren-569

    This makes me so angry on your behalf. Your dad is still hurting and this guy just gets to walk away? The system really does feel like it protects certain people. Please keep pushing — don't let this get swept under the rug.

  • 9
    clear-grouse-800

    The thing about suing a government employee — even off-duty — is that some states require you to file a formal "notice of claim" with a government agency before you can even file a lawsuit, and the window to do that can be as short as 60 to 180 days depending on where you are. I'd strongly recommend your dad at least consult with someone this week, not next month. Seriously.

  • 5
    mellow-badger-295

    Here's what worries me — if the government is involved in any way, their insurance or legal team is going to be VERY motivated to minimize this. They have lawyers who do nothing but handle these cases all day. Your dad needs someone in his corner who knows how to deal with that. Don't just let the insurance adjuster call the shots.

    • 16
      genuine-swift-419

      I used to work in claims and I'll be honest with you — when law enforcement or government employees are involved, things get complicated fast in terms of who actually covers what. Sometimes there's a personal auto policy, sometimes there's government indemnification, sometimes both, sometimes neither. A good PI attorney will know how to figure out where the money actually is. That's step one.

    • 2
      grounded-overpass601

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 20
    clear-marmot-324

    I'm so sorry. We went through something similar — the person who hit us had connections and somehow the criminal side just evaporated. What I learned the hard way is that the criminal case and a civil personal injury case are completely separate things. One being dropped doesn't kill the other. Don't give up.

    • 17
      genuine-stoat-391

      Not legal advice, but I can tell you that nolle prosequi is a prosecutorial decision — it means the DA chose not to move forward, not that the defendant was found innocent. Importantly, that has essentially no bearing on your dad's right to pursue a civil claim for his injuries. The standard of proof in civil court is also much lower than criminal. If the driver was a government employee acting off-duty, there are some extra procedural hoops (like notice of claim requirements and shorter deadlines in some states), so your family should talk to someone soon. Those deadlines can sneak up.

    • 2
      calm-neighbor268

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

    • 5
      restless-road-soul678

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.