The Shoulder
The Shoulder
75
Car accidentstidy-marmot-267

Hit and run shattered my shoulder and collarbone — driver found, now what?

I don't even know where to start. About three weeks ago I was crossing an intersection on my motorcycle when a sedan just blew through a red light and slammed into me. Didn't stop. Didn't slow down. Actually sped up going around the corner. Left me in the middle of the road.

Somebody called 911 and I got airlifted to the hospital. Ended up with a shattered clavicle, a badly fractured shoulder blade, and some internal bruising they're still monitoring. I've had one surgery already and my orthopedic surgeon is talking about a second one.

The timing couldn't be worse. I'd just gotten back to full-time work after dealing with a chronic illness for almost two years — like genuinely rebuilding my life from scratch, physically and financially. I had started a new job literally the month before this happened. Now I'm out indefinitely and have no idea how to even pay rent next month.

The driver was caught two days later. Turns out they had a suspended license. So at least there's that.

I have my own insurance with uninsured/underinsured coverage, but I honestly don't know if that even applies when the driver is found and technically has some minimum coverage on the car (registered to someone else apparently).

I feel completely underwater. I haven't signed anything from any insurance company yet because something felt off about how fast they reached out. Has anyone dealt with a hit and run where the driver was actually caught? How did the insurance side of things shake out? Do I need a lawyer for this or can I handle it myself?

Any experience or advice is genuinely appreciated. I'm still in a lot of pain and just trying to figure out my next steps.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 18
    silent-beaver-489

    I went through something really similar — driver ran, got caught, had a suspended license, and the insurance situation was a total mess because the car was in someone else's name. Honestly the ownership thing complicated everything. I ended up getting a PI attorney and I'm really glad I did. Just the fact that there's a criminal case happening at the same time as the civil stuff gets confusing fast.

  • 17
    patient-finch-959

    That part about them reaching out fast? Trust your gut. Insurance adjusters — whether it's yours or theirs — sometimes contact injured people early specifically because you're overwhelmed and more likely to accept something low or say something that hurts you later. Do not give a recorded statement to anyone without understanding exactly what it's for. Seriously.

  • 24
    gentle-wolf-495

    Former claims adjuster here. The fact that the vehicle was registered to someone other than the driver actually matters a lot and can affect which policy (if any) covers the damages. Your own UM/UIM coverage may absolutely come into play even though the driver was found — it's not just for hit-and-runs where the person is never identified. It depends on how your policy is worded and whether the at-fault driver's coverage is insufficient for your injuries, which with two surgeries it very likely will be. Pull your own declarations page and look at your UM/UIM limits ASAP.

  • 13
    curious-sparrow-576

    A few things worth keeping track of right now:

    • Save everything — ER records, imaging, surgical notes, any bills that come in
    • Document your missed work in writing somehow, even just emails to your employer
    • Keep a pain journal if you can, even short entries — it matters later
    • Don't post about the accident on social media at all

    The suspended license and the criminal case running parallel to a civil claim is exactly the kind of situation where having someone in your corner who knows the process makes a real difference.

    • 5
      mellow-vole-505

      Quick question — when you say the car was registered to someone else, do you know if that person had insurance on the vehicle? Because that could actually be a separate source of coverage depending on the state you're in and whether the owner gave permission for the driver to use it. It changes the picture a bit. Also, what are your own UM/UIM limits? That's going to matter a lot here.

    • 9
      careful-rider321

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 17
    clear-marten-197

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this — when you have a hit and run with a caught driver, a suspended license, a third-party vehicle registration, serious orthopedic injuries, and lost wages from a new job, that's not a case I'd recommend handling solo. Too many moving parts. Most PI attorneys work on contingency so there's no upfront cost, and a consultation is almost always free. At minimum, talk to one before you respond to any insurance company. Again, not legal advice — just a strong suggestion.

  • 16
    keen-wren-293

    Please make sure your surgical and follow-up care is being properly documented at every appointment. I've seen people rush through follow-ups when they start feeling slightly better, and then months later realize they have complications or permanent limitations that weren't fully captured in their records. Your shoulder and clavicle injuries can have really long recovery timelines. Don't minimize symptoms to your doctors just because you want to feel optimistic. Tell them everything.

  • 7
    bold-wolf-405

    I just want to say I'm so sorry this happened to you, especially right when things were finally coming together. That's just brutal. Please lean on people around you right now if you can — you don't have to figure all of this out alone and definitely not while you're still healing.

    • 0
      kind-dreamer874

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 15
    bright-crow-113

    Three things: don't sign anything, don't give recorded statements, and go talk to a personal injury lawyer this week. Most will see you for free. You've got real injuries, a documented at-fault driver, and ongoing medical treatment — that's exactly the kind of case attorneys take seriously. Stop trying to navigate the insurance stuff yourself, it's not worth it.