The Shoulder
The Shoulder
48
Insuranceclever-vole-375

Hit by a drunk driver who "had insurance" at the scene — now crickets from his carrier

I'm still so angry I can barely type this out coherently, so bear with me.

A few months back I was heading home from a late shift, totally routine drive, when I got rear-ended hard at a red light. The guy who hit me reeked of alcohol — like, you could smell it through my cracked window. He was stumbling around, slurring, the whole thing. Cops came, he got a DUI on the spot, and he handed over an insurance card that seemed legitimate. I photographed everything, got the officer's report number, thought I was being responsible.

Fast forward to now: I've got a stack of hospital bills I can't pay, I'm still dealing with neck and shoulder pain that my doctor says could be chronic, and I had to drain my savings to replace my car because I needed it to get to work. Meanwhile, when I finally tracked down his insurance carrier, they're telling me the policy was either cancelled before the crash or never active at all. Nobody can give me a straight answer.

I feel completely blindsided. I did everything right — stayed at the scene, cooperated with police, filed claims promptly. And this guy who was drunk behind the wheel gets to just... walk away while I'm drowning?

Has anyone dealt with uninsured or "phantom insurance" situations like this? I have my own auto policy and I'm trying to figure out if my uninsured motorist coverage actually kicks in here. I'm also wondering if it's even worth pursuing the driver personally. He doesn't seem like someone with a lot of assets but I'm desperate at this point.

Any advice or even just commiseration would mean a lot right now.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 17
    bold-swift-635

    This happened to me almost exactly — different circumstances but same fake insurance card situation. YES, your own UM (uninsured motorist) coverage is absolutely what you should be leaning on right now. Call your own insurer and explicitly say 'I want to open an uninsured motorist claim.' Don't let them talk you into only filing a collision claim, because that's not the same thing and the payouts are different. It took me a while to figure that out and I wish someone had told me sooner.

  • 11
    gentle-lynx-212

    Even when you file the UM claim with your own carrier, don't assume they're on your side. They're still an insurance company trying to minimize payouts. They may push back on your medical bills or try to lowball the pain-and-suffering piece. Document every single symptom, every doctor visit, every medication. Don't give them a recorded statement without understanding your rights first.

  • 22
    calm-newt-146

    I used to work claims and I want to be honest with you: cancelled or fraudulent insurance cards are more common than people realize, especially with DUI drivers. A few things worth knowing — first, when you file the UM claim your own insurer will likely investigate the at-fault driver's policy status independently, so keep any documentation you have of that card. Second, some states have guarantee funds or assigned risk pools for situations exactly like this. Third, your insurer will try to subrogate (recover money) from the drunk driver on their own if they pay you out, which is actually in your favor — it puts pressure on him financially without you having to chase him yourself.

  • 21
    clear-stoat-166

    Not legal advice, but worth knowing: even if this guy has no real assets today, a civil judgment can follow someone for years. Some attorneys who handle these cases work on contingency, so you wouldn't pay upfront. The DUI conviction, if it happens, also tends to make civil cases more straightforward. Might be worth at least a free consultation to understand your options — not just against him, but also to make sure your own UM claim is handled properly.

  • 7
    careful-seal-281

    Please don't ignore the neck and shoulder pain hoping it'll resolve on its own. I've seen patients dismiss 'mild' whiplash-type injuries for months and then end up with much more complicated treatment paths later. Get a referral to a specialist, get it documented thoroughly, and keep a simple pain journal — even just a notes app entry each day rating your pain and describing what you can't do. That documentation matters more than people realize.

    • 2
      patient-wanderer304

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 14
    patient-elk-182

    I'm so sorry, this is genuinely awful. You got hit by a drunk driver AND have to deal with this insurance nightmare on top of recovering? That's so unfair. Please don't try to white-knuckle through the financial stress alone — there may be more help available than you realize. Rooting for you.

    • 1
      tired-survivor975

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 8
    daring-dove-684

    Three things to do right now if you haven't: (1) Send a formal written letter to your own insurer opening the UM claim — email with read receipt so you have a timestamp. (2) Get a copy of the police report if you don't have it yet, because the DUI documentation in there is gold. (3) Stop talking to anyone from any insurance company on the phone without taking notes immediately after. Adjusters' memories get very convenient when it helps them.

  • 20
    careful-lynx-181

    Quick question — did your own policy actually include UM coverage, or did you waive it when you bought the policy? Some people don't realize they opted out to save a few bucks. Worth pulling up your declarations page before you count on it. Also, what did your insurer say specifically when you called them — did they open a claim at all?

    • 5
      quiet-driver242

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.