The Shoulder
The Shoulder
67
mellow-kestrel-477

Hit someone's car at night, panicked and drove off — now facing criminal charges. Terrified.

I'm 24 and I've never dealt with anything like this before. A few weeks ago I was driving home really late after a long shift and I clipped the side mirror of a parked car while pulling out of a tight spot. It was dark, I was exhausted, I freaked out and just... drove away. I hate that I did that. I've felt sick about it ever since.

Now I've got two things coming at me at the same time — a civil traffic citation and a criminal misdemeanor charge for leaving the scene. The criminal one requires me to physically appear in court, which I've never done in my life. I have zero record, not even a parking ticket.

A few things I keep thinking about that maybe work in my favor:

  • No one actually saw me do it. The whole lot had no working lights and there's no camera coverage on that side of the building.
  • My car has basically no visible damage — tiny scuff on the bumper that could've come from anything.
  • The incident report was filed based on a neighbor's description of a car that night, not a plate or a face.

I'm trying to figure out what to realistically expect here and what kind of attorney I should be looking for. Do I need someone who handles both the civil and criminal side? Is there any shot at keeping this off my permanent record if I've never been in trouble before?

I work in healthcare and a misdemeanor conviction could genuinely affect my license. That's what scares me most. I just want to handle this the right way going forward and stop spiraling at 2am googling worst-case scenarios.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 16
    plain-finch-255

    One thing to know: civil traffic citations and criminal misdemeanors are handled in completely different tracks, but some defense attorneys will bundle them together in their fee. When you're shopping around for representation, ask specifically whether their quote covers both matters — civil disposition and the criminal appearance. A lot of people don't ask that and get surprised later. Also ask whether they've handled cases involving professional licensing boards before, because that's a separate layer some attorneys aren't used to thinking about.

  • 16
    kind-elk-715

    Whatever you do, be careful what you say to anyone — including your own insurance company — before you have an attorney. I know it feels like cooperating will help you, but statements you make now can and do show up later. I've seen people try to get ahead of things by calling and explaining themselves and it just created more problems.

  • 14
    brave-crane-489

    From my time on the insurance side — when there's no direct witness identification and no camera footage, these cases are genuinely harder to prove than people think. That doesn't mean ignore it, obviously, but the 'description of a car' thing you mentioned is pretty thin evidence. An attorney worth their fee will know exactly how to probe that. The fact that you're taking it seriously and not just ignoring the charges already puts you ahead of a lot of people I saw come through.

  • 12
    warm-beaver-407

    The healthcare license piece is real and you're right to be worried about it. Depending on your specific credential and your state's licensing board, even an arrest — not just a conviction — can trigger a self-reporting obligation. I'd look into whether your license has any reporting requirements while this is still pending. Your attorney should know, but it's worth asking your licensing board's FAQ directly too.

    • 8
      gentle-commuter634

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 10
    keen-owl-956

    Please don't keep spiraling alone with this. The 2am Google rabbit hole is not your friend. Talk to someone — even just getting one consultation with a lawyer will probably make you feel way more in control than anything you'll find by searching worst-case scenarios at midnight. You made a mistake, you clearly feel awful about it, and that matters.

  • 5
    quiet-seal-468

    I went through something kind of similar a couple years back — not a parked car situation but I was in a fender bender and left because I panicked. The anxiety of waiting for something to happen was honestly worse than the legal process itself. For what it's worth, having zero prior record made a real difference in how my case was handled. Hang in there.

    • 14
      curious-wren-954

      Not legal advice, but just generally speaking — first-time offenders with clean records in misdemeanor leaving-the-scene cases often have options that aren't obvious at first. Things like diversion programs, deferred adjudication, or plea structures that avoid a formal conviction on your record exist in a lot of jurisdictions. The professional license concern is 100% worth flagging explicitly to any attorney you talk to — that context changes the strategy. Get a consult before you do anything else.

    • 10
      sharp-crane-723

      Stop Googling and start calling attorneys. Seriously. Most do free consultations. You've got real concerns — the professional license exposure especially — and those need an actual human being who can look at the specific charges and jurisdiction, not Reddit threads or legal info websites. The sooner you have representation lined up before your court date, the better your options typically are.

    • 14
      steady-finch-874

      I don't want to pile on but I'm a little confused — how did you end up charged if no one saw you and there's no plate? Did you get contacted by police at home, or did you self-report at some point? That detail might actually matter a lot for how this plays out. Just trying to understand the full picture.