The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
candid-marten-742

Got a citation after rear-ending someone — is it even worth fighting when I have dashcam proof?

So this happened about ten days ago and I'm still kind of processing everything.

I was heading home on a busy surface street during evening traffic. The cars ahead of me had been stop-and-go for a few blocks. I moved forward when the line started moving, checked my mirrors and my blind spots like you're supposed to, and by the time I looked straight ahead again the SUV in front of me had braked hard. I had maybe a second to react. I clipped their rear bumper — not a massive crash, but enough.

Here's the thing: my dashcam clearly shows the car ahead braked with zero warning, no gradual slowdown, just full stop out of nowhere. The driver of the other car even said to the officer on scene that traffic had been "impossible" and that stops had been sudden all along that stretch. None of that seemed to matter — I still walked away with a citation for following too closely.

My car is probably a total loss (waiting on the adjuster). I sprained my shoulder and have some neck stiffness that's been getting worse, not better. I've got an ER visit, a follow-up appointment, and now this ticket sitting on my kitchen table.

I'm not a reckless driver. I genuinely don't feel like I was being careless. But I also don't know if contesting a citation is worth the time, stress, and money if the odds are stacked against me anyway.

Has anyone actually fought a ticket like this and won? Is dashcam footage even useful in traffic court? And does the citation affect my injury claim at all? Feeling pretty beat up about the whole thing — literally and figuratively.

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10 replies

  • 22
    gentle-bison-078

    Can I just flag something — shoulder sprains and neck stiffness that get worse over the first week or two after an accident are really common with soft tissue injuries, but that doesn't mean you should brush them off. Please make sure you tell your doctor that symptoms are worsening, not improving. Get it all documented. Whatever happens with the legal stuff, your body needs to be on record so nothing gets dismissed later as 'pre-existing' or minor.

    • 16
      careful-swan-799

      On the dashcam footage — in most places you can subpoena your own footage into evidence for a traffic court hearing. It's not as complicated as it sounds. You'd basically show up, request to present evidence, and play the clip. Some people just call the clerk's office ahead of time and ask what the process is for presenting video in a contested hearing. The clerks are usually pretty helpful about explaining the steps, even if they can't give you advice.

  • 19
    candid-finch-822

    I fought a following-too-closely citation a couple years ago and I actually won. I brought my dashcam footage on a USB drive and asked the court if I could show it. The officer didn't even show up to contest it, which helped, but the judge did watch the clip. It's genuinely worth at least showing up — worst case you lose and pay the fine anyway, which is where you'd be if you did nothing.

    • 12
      curious-swift-985

      You actually have more going for you than a lot of people in this situation — you have footage, you have a witness (the other driver) who confirmed the stopping was abrupt, and you're asking these questions early. A lot of folks just pay the ticket and move on and then regret it when the insurance stuff gets complicated. You're already ahead by even thinking this through.

  • 17
    swift-tern-023

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: citations and civil liability are separate tracks, but they absolutely can bleed into each other. A paid citation can be used as an admission in some jurisdictions. Whether it's worth contesting depends on your local court process and how strong your footage is — and from what you're describing, it sounds like it could be genuinely useful. Worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney before you decide anything.

  • 17
    genuine-newt-577

    Former adjuster here. We were absolutely trained to check whether a citation was paid or contested. A paid ticket was a green light to push comparative fault arguments and reduce payouts. I'm not saying we were always right to do it, but that's the reality. If your dashcam footage shows what you say it does, don't just fold on the ticket.

    • 6
      grounded-road-soul241

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 17
    swift-seal-117

    Contest the ticket. Bring the dashcam footage. Show up early, dress neatly, be calm and factual. If the footage is as clear as you say, you have a real shot. And even if you lose, the process of contesting it shows you didn't just roll over — which matters for the bigger fight with insurance over your car and your injuries.

  • 10
    tidy-heron-619

    Please be careful here. If you just pay that citation without fighting it, you're essentially admitting fault in writing. Insurance adjusters WILL use that against you when you try to file for your injuries or your totaled car. I've seen people get lowballed hard because they figured 'it's just a small ticket, easier to pay it.' Don't give them that ammunition without at least exploring your options.

  • 9
    candid-owl-079

    How short was the following distance though? Like I get that the stop was sudden, but traffic court judges hear 'I was scanning my surroundings' a lot. Do you have a specific timestamp on the dashcam that shows the distance and the brake lights — or lack of them — before impact? That detail could make or break whether the footage actually helps you.