The Shoulder
The Shoulder
64
Car accidentsswift-owl-565

Got rear-ended but somehow I'm the one who got the ticket?? Can this be right?

Still kind of in shock so bear with me.

I was on the interstate yesterday, traffic started bunching up out of nowhere — you know how it just happens sometimes. I slowed down with everyone else, totally normal stop-and-go stuff. The pickup truck behind me wasn't paying attention and plowed right into my back bumper. Pretty solid hit. Airbags didn't go off but my neck and back are already stiffening up today.

Here's the part I can't wrap my head around: the officer who responded ended up writing me a ticket. Something about following too closely to the car ahead of me, even though I was the one who got hit from behind. The truck driver got nothing. Zero.

I just... how? I've been driving for over a decade and never had an at-fault accident. I wasn't tailgating, I wasn't distracted. Traffic stopped and I stopped with it.

Now I'm worried about what this means for insurance. If the ticket says I caused it, does that mean the truck driver's insurance can just walk away? Does the ticket actually determine who's liable in a civil claim, or are those two separate things?

I do have dashcam footage that I think shows what really happened but I don't know if that even matters at this point.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Feeling really frustrated and honestly a little helpless right now.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 20
    bright-lynx-370

    A few practical things worth doing right now: contest the ticket if you can — you usually have a window to request a hearing. Get a copy of the police report and check it carefully for errors. Document your injuries with a doctor visit even if you think you're just sore, because soft tissue stuff often gets worse before it gets better and you want a medical record that lines up with the accident date. Keep every receipt and photo you take.

  • 19
    wise-vole-337

    I used to work claims for a mid-sized carrier and I can tell you — we looked at citations but they weren't the whole story. We'd look at vehicle damage patterns, point of impact, photos, statements, all of it. A rear-end impact tells its own story about who was moving and who wasn't. Your dashcam footage is gold. Back it up in multiple places right now if you haven't already, and don't share it with anyone until you know what it shows and who you're sharing it with.

    • 7
      kind-rider868

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 17
    calm-heron-160

    Please go get checked out today if you haven't already. Neck and back stiffness after a rear-end hit can be whiplash, and it genuinely does peak a day or two after the accident — people always think they're fine and then wake up on day three barely able to turn their head. An ER or urgent care visit creates documentation and also makes sure nothing more serious is going on.

  • 15
    humble-hare-479

    Please be careful when talking to the other driver's insurance. They will absolutely use that ticket against you to minimize or deny your claim. Don't give them a recorded statement without understanding what you're walking into. They're not on your side — full stop.

  • 15
    brave-hare-829

    Two things: contest that ticket, and get a lawyer consult before you talk to any insurance company other than your own. The dashcam is your best friend here — don't sit on it but don't hand it over carelessly either. This is very winnable.

  • 12
    wise-swift-301

    Oh man, this happened to almost the exact same way to me a couple years ago. I got rear-ended on a merge ramp and somehow walked away with a citation too. It felt completely backwards. What I learned is that the traffic ticket and the insurance liability question are actually pretty separate things — the ticket is the officer's opinion in the moment, but it doesn't automatically decide who owes who in a crash claim. Don't give up just because of that piece of paper.

    • 20
      tidy-tern-987

      Not legal advice, but generally speaking, traffic citations and civil liability for an accident are evaluated independently. A ticket issued at the scene is just one data point — it's not a court judgment. In most states, the person who rear-ends another vehicle carries a strong presumption of fault because drivers are expected to maintain a safe following distance. Your dashcam footage could be really significant here. I'd at least consult with a PI attorney before assuming the ticket settles the question. Most do free consultations.

    • 9
      patient-owl-742

      What exactly does the ticket say the infraction was? And did the officer actually witness the crash or arrive after the fact? Those details matter a lot. An officer who wasn't there is basically just taking someone's word for it and looking at where the cars ended up.

    • 0
      hopeful-dreamer968

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

    • 4
      level-sidewalk595

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