The Shoulder
The Shoulder
50
Car accidentshumble-grouse-482

Dump truck driver and his dispatcher tried to convince me the crash was MY fault — what now?

So this happened about two weeks ago and I'm still kind of in shock about how the whole thing went down.

I was merging onto the highway and was fully in my lane — I'd completed the merge, matched speed, everything — when a dump truck from a local construction company just drifted into me from the left. No signal, no warning. Took out my front quarter panel and mirror and pushed me into the rumble strip. I kept control and we both pulled over.

Here's where it got wild. Before I even got out of my car, the driver was already on his phone. When I walked up to do the normal insurance swap, he got really aggressive and said I had "cut him off" and that I "came out of nowhere." I have dashcam footage that shows exactly what happened. I stayed calm and just asked for his insurance info.

He called his dispatcher — who was also suddenly very sure I was at fault — and this guy on the phone starts telling me I should just "handle it between ourselves" and that if I filed a claim it would "only hurt me in the long run." That set off every alarm bell I have.

I asked three more times for the insurance info. Got stonewalled. Finally I called the police non-emergency line, an officer came out, and within about ten minutes the driver handed everything over.

I have the dashcam footage, the police report number, and photos of both vehicles. My car is drivable but needs real work, and my neck has been stiff and sore since that afternoon.

What should I expect from their insurance company? Should I be worried they're going to try this same pressure stuff through official channels? Feeling pretty overwhelmed.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 15
    calm-wolf-941

    The 'handle it between ourselves' line is such a red flag — that's exactly what the driver's company rep said to me after a work van clipped my car last year. They're hoping you'll take some small cash payment and disappear. Don't do it. The fact that you have dashcam footage changes everything. Hang onto that file and back it up somewhere safe today if you haven't already.

    • 15
      bold-crow-753

      Just a heads up: once their insurance adjuster contacts you, they're going to be just as friendly and reasonable-sounding as that dispatcher was aggressive. It's a different tactic but the same goal — minimize what they pay out. They might even call before you do, acting like they just want to 'get things sorted quickly.' Don't give a recorded statement without thinking it through first.

  • 8
    patient-owl-900

    I used to work on the commercial vehicle side of claims and I'll tell you honestly — construction and trucking companies sometimes coach their drivers to deny everything on scene because early admissions can complicate things for them legally. The dispatcher calling you directly to discourage a claim is not normal or okay. Document that it happened, roughly what was said, and when. That behavior alone is worth noting.

  • 10
    quiet-lynx-247

    A few practical things worth doing right now if you haven't: (1) write down everything you remember about the scene, the conversation, and what the dispatcher said — timestamps, exact words if you can recall them; (2) get a copy of the official police report as soon as it's available; (3) see a doctor about your neck even if it feels manageable, because soft tissue stuff can sneak up on you and you want it documented early. None of this is legal advice, just process stuff that tends to matter later.

  • 22
    silent-lynx-900

    Please don't brush off the neck stiffness. I know it's easy to think 'I'll just stretch it out' but whiplash-type injuries often feel minor for the first few days and then get significantly worse around day 3–5. If you haven't seen a doctor yet, go soon — not just for your health but because having a medical record that ties your symptoms to the crash date really matters if this becomes a bigger issue.

    • 14
      sharp-elk-268

      Back up that dashcam footage to at least two places right now. Cloud, external drive, email it to yourself — whatever. That footage is your whole case and dashcam files can get overwritten or corrupted. Everything else you can figure out, but losing that video would be a real problem.

    • 6
      curious-walker190

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

  • 9
    quiet-heron-140

    Not legal advice, but: commercial vehicle accidents are a different animal from regular fender-benders. These companies carry large policies and have experienced claims teams. Having dashcam footage is genuinely significant. Given the neck injury and the conduct you're describing, it might be worth at least a free consult with a personal injury attorney before you talk to their insurer — many work on contingency so there's no upfront cost. Just something to consider.

    • 6
      calm-driver335

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

  • 19
    clear-bison-572

    I'm so sorry this happened to you. The fact that they immediately went into denial mode and then tried to talk you out of filing — that's just awful. You did everything right by staying calm and getting the police involved. I really hope the neck thing turns out to be minor. Are you doing okay otherwise?