The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsgentle-raven-372

Got a ticket after a bad intersection crash — injured driver, court date coming up, panicking

I'm kind of a mess right now and hoping someone here has been through something like this.

About three weeks ago I pulled out of a side street onto a highway. I genuinely thought the van coming from my left was slowing down to turn, so I went. It wasn't turning. We hit pretty hard and the other driver got taken away in an ambulance. I've been sick about it ever since.

The officer cited me for failure to yield. Problem is there was a bystander who told the cop I rolled through the stop sign — which, honestly, in the chaos I'm not even 100% sure what I did. My mind went blank.

Some things I'm losing sleep over:

  • The other driver's injuries. I don't know how bad it is. I'm scared I'm going to get a lawsuit dropped on me. I'm on my dad's insurance policy and I don't know if that creates problems for him too.
  • The ticket itself. I have a court date next month. Do I just pay it and move on or actually show up? I already have some points on my license from a fender-bender last year.
  • My car. It's totaled. Even though I was at fault, does insurance still help me replace it or am I just out a car?
  • License. Is there any realistic risk of suspension here, or is that only if things escalate?

I know I probably need a lawyer for the civil side but I genuinely don't know where to start. The insurance company has been calling and I've just been avoiding it because I don't know what to say.

Has anyone actually been the at-fault driver in a serious crash? What happened next for you?

9replies

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9 replies

  • 15
    quiet-marten-696

    I was the at-fault driver in an accident a couple years back — not as serious as yours sounds, but the other person did go to urgent care. The guilt alone almost broke me, so first: you're not a monster, accidents happen.

    What I learned the hard way is don't avoid the insurance calls forever. You need to at least report it if you haven't already — silence can actually make things worse for your claim. That said, you don't have to answer a bunch of detailed questions without knowing your rights first. I asked my insurer if I could just give a basic statement and hold off on the recorded one until I understood more. They said yes.

  • 8
    clear-crow-358

    Please stop avoiding those calls but also do NOT give a recorded statement yet. That recorded statement is gold for them if there's a liability dispute later. You're still rattled, you might say something inaccurate, and they will absolutely use it. Report the claim, confirm the basics, and tell them you'll cooperate fully once you've had a chance to speak with an attorney about your rights. That's completely normal and not an admission of anything.

  • 24
    wise-stoat-133

    Former claims adjuster here. A few things from the inside:

    1. Your dad's policy will very likely cover the other driver's injuries up to the policy limits — that's literally what liability coverage is for. Whether those limits are enough if the injuries are serious is the real question. 2. Your own car — if your dad's policy includes collision coverage, yes, you can still make a claim even as the at-fault driver. You'll pay the deductible and rates may go up, but you're not just left with nothing. 3. The fact that someone told the officer you rolled the sign doesn't automatically mean that becomes the official finding. It was a witness statement, not forensic proof. But if you go to court and contest the ticket, everything gets more scrutiny.

    Talk to a PI attorney before you do anything with that court date. Not legal advice, just how I'd play it.

    • 19
      patient-sparrow-311

      I just want to check in on you for a second. Watching someone get taken away in an ambulance after something you were involved in is traumatic. Seriously. I've seen patients come into the ER after accidents and people always focus on the physical injuries — but the at-fault driver never gets asked how they're doing. If you're not sleeping, can't stop replaying it, please talk to someone. A counselor, your doctor, anyone. You need to be okay to handle all the legal and insurance stuff ahead.

  • 18
    careful-hare-567

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: the ticket and any potential civil claim from the other driver are two separate tracks that can influence each other. If you pay the ticket without going to court, that can sometimes be treated as an admission in a civil case depending on your state. That alone is worth a 20-minute consultation with a personal injury or traffic attorney before your court date. Many will do a free call. Don't let that date pass without at least knowing your options.

  • 21
    quick-wolf-763

    On the court date question — showing up is almost always better than just paying. When you pay without appearing, it's usually treated as a guilty plea automatically. When you show up, you have options: you can sometimes negotiate a reduced charge, get traffic school in lieu of points, or at minimum have a real conversation with the prosecutor. Whether that's the right move given your specific situation is something an attorney can walk you through quickly. Some traffic lawyers charge a flat fee for this kind of hearing and it's often worth it.

    • 4
      thankful-mile-marker455

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 10
    plain-marmot-994

    I don't know anything about the legal side but I just want to say — the fact that you're this worried about the other driver says something about who you are. You made a mistake in a split second, just like anyone could. I hope you're talking to people in your life about this, not just strangers on the internet (no offense to this thread lol). This sounds like a lot to carry alone.

  • 8
    spry-wren-182

    Okay here's the short version of what you need to do:

    1. Report the claim to your dad's insurer today if you haven't. 2. Do not give a recorded statement yet. 3. Call at least one PI attorney before your court date — many are free consults. 4. Show up to court, don't just mail in payment.

    You're panicking, which is understandable, but panicking leads to bad decisions. Make a list, knock it out one step at a time.