The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
bright-owl-728

Hit by debris from a semi that fled — dashcam footage too blurry to read the plates. Help?

I'm still shaking a little writing this out, honestly.

Last Thursday I was on the highway during my normal commute when a big rig in front of me started shedding stuff — looked like loose strapping and what I think was scrap metal. A chunk of something slammed into my hood and cracked my windshield bad enough that I could barely see. The truck just... kept going. Didn't slow down, didn't pull over, actually seemed to speed up and wedge itself between two other semis like it was hiding.

I managed to get over to the shoulder without hitting anyone, which honestly feels like a miracle. My car is drivable but the hood is dented pretty severely and the windshield is a spiderweb on the passenger side. I've got some neck stiffness that started the next morning — nothing unbearable but it's not going away.

Here's my problem: my dashcam caught the whole thing. Clear video of the debris flying, the impact, everything. But the truck's rear plate and the company DOT number on the back were either too far away or the resolution just tanks at that distance. I can make out maybe 3 characters on the plate but that's it.

I filed a police report the same day and mentioned the partial plate, but I haven't heard anything back. My insurance is calling it an uninsured motorist situation for now.

Has anyone been through something like this? Is there any way to actually track down the truck company with partial info and dashcam footage? And should I be talking to someone before I say much more to my insurance adjuster?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 9
    swift-badger-692

    I went through almost the exact same thing two years ago — debris from a flatbed, partial plate, the whole nightmare. What actually helped me was contacting the state highway patrol's commercial vehicle enforcement division directly, not just filing a standard police report. They have databases specifically for DOT-registered trucks and sometimes can narrow things down with partial plates plus a time window and highway segment. It took a few weeks but they actually found the carrier. Don't give up on that angle.

    • 20
      cool-crane-687

      Speaking from experience on the other side of the desk — insurers do sometimes have tools and contacts to track down commercial vehicles that they won't volunteer to use unless pushed. If you have a timeframe, highway, direction of travel, and even a partial plate or partial DOT number, ask your adjuster directly what steps they're taking to identify the carrier. Put it in writing, like an email or a follow-up letter. That alone sometimes changes how much effort they put in.

  • 14
    spry-sparrow-325

    Before you do anything else, get that dashcam footage backed up in multiple places — cloud, a USB drive, email it to yourself. Right now. Video has a way of disappearing or getting corrupted at the worst possible moment and it's your most important asset here.

  • 15
    bright-elk-943

    A few things worth knowing from a process standpoint: dashcam footage can sometimes be enhanced by forensic imaging services — law enforcement uses these tools but some attorneys have access to them too. Also, commercial trucks operating interstate are required to display a USDOT number, not just a plate. If your footage shows even a partial DOT number on the door or trailer, that's searchable in the FMCSA public database at safer.fmcsa.dot.gov. Even a few digits can help narrow it down when combined with the highway, timeframe, and truck color/description. Worth a shot before assuming this is a dead end.

    • 1
      gentle-survivor306

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 11
    daring-kestrel-869

    Please be careful with what you're telling your insurance company right now. The moment they label it 'uninsured motorist' they have a financial interest in keeping it that way rather than pursuing the actual carrier. I'd hold off on giving a recorded statement until you've at least talked to someone who's on YOUR side.

    • 4
      honest-survivor277

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 5
    candid-lynx-880

    Please don't brush off that neck stiffness. Post-accident soft tissue injuries often feel minor for the first couple days and then flare up significantly around day four or five as inflammation peaks. Get seen by a doctor now, not when it gets worse. And make sure whatever you're experiencing is documented in medical records — that matters a lot later on, even if you end up being totally fine.

    • 6
      gentle-survivor481

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

  • 17
    patient-elk-457

    Not legal advice, but this fact pattern — commercial vehicle, fleeing the scene, documented debris field, physical damage, and physical symptoms — is exactly the kind of thing worth at least a free consultation on before you say much more to any insurance company. Trucking cases have specific regulations and liability layers that a general adjuster may not be motivated to fully explore for you. Just something to consider.

  • 14
    bright-vole-414

    I just want to say I'm really glad you're okay. Reading this stressed me out and I wasn't even there. Please take care of yourself physically — the car stuff and the legal stuff can get sorted out, but you matter more than all of it.