The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
mellow-wren-611

Gave my statement while still foggy — can I correct what I said?

So I'm kind of spiraling about this and hoping someone here has been through something similar.

I was rear-ended pretty hard about two weeks ago. At the scene I felt "okay" — shaken up, neck was stiff, but I was walking around and talking to the officer and everything. I gave a recorded statement to the insurance company basically the same evening because I thought I was being responsible by handling it quickly.

Here's the problem: turns out I had a mild concussion. My doctor confirmed it a few days later when I finally went in because the headaches weren't stopping. Looking back, I was absolutely not thinking straight when I gave that statement. I left out stuff — like that I'd actually braked and tried to swerve before impact, and that my shoulder had hit the door frame hard (which is now showing up as a real issue on imaging).

Now I'm worried that what I said in that first statement is "locked in" and if I try to clarify or add to it, I'll look like I'm making things up after the fact.

Is that how it works? Or is it actually normal and okay to update your account of events as your memory clears up — especially with a concussion involved? I have an attorney but I'm embarrassed to call and say "hey I forgot some stuff."

Has anyone dealt with correcting or adding to an early statement? Did it hurt your case?

13replies

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13 replies

  • 7
    genuine-raven-834

    Please call your attorney — seriously, don't be embarrassed. I had almost this exact situation after my accident. I gave a statement while I was still in shock and forgot to mention that the other driver had blown through a stop sign. My lawyer told me it happens constantly and that a documented concussion is literally a medical explanation for why your memory wasn't complete. It didn't blow up my case at all.

    • 3
      gentle-survivor475

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 7
    spry-badger-486

    From a medical standpoint, what you're describing is completely consistent with how concussions affect memory and cognition. It's not unusual for people to piece together the full sequence of events over days or even weeks after a head injury. The fact that you have a diagnosis backing this up is significant — your doctor can speak to why your recall was impaired early on. That's not you "changing your story," that's your brain recovering.

  • 9
    clever-sparrow-437

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking: attorneys expect clients to remember additional details over time, especially following any kind of head trauma. What matters is that you're not contradicting yourself on core facts — you're adding context. A concussion diagnosis in your medical records gives a clear, legitimate reason why your initial account was incomplete. Call your attorney and just tell them exactly what you told us here. That's what they're there for.

  • 7
    clever-elk-405

    That recorded statement the same day was exactly what they were hoping for, honestly. Adjusters know that people are scared and foggy right after a crash and they move fast for exactly that reason. Whatever you do, don't call the insurance company directly to "clarify" — let your attorney handle how and when any updated information gets communicated. You do NOT want to give them a second recorded statement without your lawyer knowing about it first.

    • 5
      careful-survivor900

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 11
    quick-hare-345

    I used to work on the claims side and I'll tell you — early statements full of gaps and inconsistencies are incredibly common. We saw it constantly. A concussion diagnosis genuinely changes how those inconsistencies get evaluated, because it creates a documented medical reason for impaired memory. Your lawyer can use that. What you don't want is for the new information to come out later in a deposition with no explanation. Get it to your attorney now so they can frame it properly.

    • 7
      quiet-parent415

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 16
    tidy-crane-921

    Stop spiraling and pick up the phone. Your attorney has heard this a hundred times. The call takes five minutes and it will feel so much better than sitting on this. Go.

    • 3
      curious-commuter646

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

  • 7
    spry-tern-995

    I just want to say — please don't beat yourself up about this. You'd just been in a crash AND had a concussion. Nobody is at their sharpest in that moment. The fact that you're trying to get things right now says a lot. I hope your shoulder heals up and this whole thing gets resolved smoothly for you. 💙

  • 11
    hearty-seal-484

    One thing worth knowing: in personal injury cases, medical records often tell a more complete story than any initial statement anyway. The imaging on your shoulder, the concussion diagnosis, the timeline of your symptoms — all of that becomes part of the record. Your attorney can work with documentation even when an early statement was incomplete. Just make sure they know everything you know now, and let them figure out the strategy from there.

    • 7
      honest-neighbor515

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.