The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
warm-elk-904

Got ticketed at the scene while I was still shaking — are you kidding me right now??

I'm still so angry I can barely type this out.

So I got rear-ended pretty badly last week. We're talking airbags, my car getting towed away, the whole nightmare. I'm sitting on the curb literally holding my neck because it's already stiffening up, and what does the officer decide to do? Write ME a citation. Me. The person who just got slammed into.

Apparently one of my brake lights was out. I had zero idea — I do my checks, I'm not an irresponsible driver. But even if it was out, how does that make the guy who plowed into the back of me at highway speed any less at fault?! The cop barely even talked to me. Spent most of his time chatting with the other driver and then walked over just long enough to hand me a ticket before I even got checked out by the paramedics.

Now I'm in a rental that doesn't feel right, my neck and shoulder are a mess, I have a doctor's appointment tomorrow, AND I have to deal with a citation on top of everything else.

I know a non-working brake light is technically on me but the timing of this is just brutal. Has anyone else gotten cited at the scene even though the other driver was clearly the main cause? Does a minor equipment violation like this actually hurt an insurance claim or a potential case? I don't want this ticket to be used against me when the other guy is the one who hit me.

Just needed to vent. This whole week has been a lot.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 14
    daring-seal-095

    Oh man, I felt this in my chest. After my accident the cop gave ME a 'failure to yield' note in his report even though I had the green light and there was a witness who confirmed it. It felt like such a betrayal when I was already traumatized. You are not alone in this. The citation doesn't automatically mean the claim goes against you — I learned that the hard way but it ended up okay.

    • 10
      quick-heron-731

      Do NOT just pay that ticket without thinking it through first. The moment you pay it, you're essentially admitting fault in writing. The other driver's insurance WILL try to use that to reduce what they owe you. Talk to someone before you do anything with that citation.

    • 1
      weathered-mile-marker469

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 10
    hearty-marmot-241

    I used to work claims and honestly? An equipment violation like a brake light is a pretty weak comparative fault argument when someone rear-ends you. The following distance and speed of the driver behind you is almost always the dominant factor. That said, adjusters absolutely are trained to look for anything in the police report that lets them shift even a small percentage of fault onto you — so yeah, don't ignore that ticket.

  • 12
    hearty-lynx-503

    Not legal advice, but equipment citations at accident scenes are often contestable, and in most states rear-end collisions carry a strong presumption of fault against the trailing driver regardless of minor vehicle conditions. Whether that ticket has real impact on your claim depends heavily on your state's comparative fault rules. Worth at least a free consult before you decide how to handle it.

    • 5
      plainspoken-backseat411

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 11
    quick-finch-849

    Please make sure you don't skip that doctor's appointment tomorrow even if you wake up feeling 'okay.' Neck and shoulder injuries from rear-end collisions can feel manageable the next morning and then hit you like a wall 48-72 hours later when the adrenaline fully wears off. Document everything they find, even if it seems minor to you.

    • 15
      bright-newt-708

      Two things you need to do right now: 1) Get that brake light fixed and keep the receipt — it shows good faith. 2) Request a full copy of the police report as soon as it's available and read every word. If anything in it is factually wrong you may be able to contest it. Don't just stew, take action where you can.

  • 14
    bold-grouse-168

    Ugh, I'm so sorry. You went through something scary and instead of being treated like the victim you are, you got handed paperwork. That's genuinely awful and your frustration makes complete sense. Hoping your appointment tomorrow brings some answers and that things start looking up from here 💙

  • 16
    keen-stoat-986

    I hear you that this feels unfair, but I'm curious — did the officer explain specifically what the citation was for, or did he just hand you something and walk off? Because the type of violation actually matters a lot here. An equipment fix-it ticket is very different from something that implies driving behavior. Do you know which one it was?

    • 9
      steady-parent381

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

    • 2
      level-offramp793

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.