The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsquick-marmot-380

Officer showed up, took zero notes, and now there's no crash report — what do I do?

I'm honestly at a loss right now and could use some guidance from people who've been through something similar.

About six weeks ago I was hit at a four-way intersection when a traffic light was completely out due to a bad storm. Everyone was supposed to treat it as a stop sign. I had the right of way, pulled through, and got T-boned by a van that never even slowed down. My front quarter panel got crushed and my car had to be towed — totally undriveable.

I called 911 right away. An officer showed up, walked around the cars, snapped a few photos on what looked like his personal phone, and chatted briefly with the other driver. He never once asked me for my license, registration, or insurance. Didn't take a statement. Just told us both to 'move along' and drove off. I figured he'd file something — isn't that the whole point of calling them?

Fast forward to now: the other driver's insurance is claiming I was at least partially at fault. My adjuster keeps saying the police report will 'clarify things' and to sit tight. So I finally drove down to the records window at the police department myself... and there is NO report. Nothing. Like the crash never happened.

I have my own photos from the scene, a dashcam clip that shows the whole thing, and the other driver's contact and insurance info. But apparently none of that is moving my claim forward.

Has anyone dealt with a missing police report before? Can I file something myself after the fact? Should I be talking to a lawyer at this point? I'm already out a rental and I'm getting the runaround from the adjuster. Feeling pretty stuck.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 17
    warm-wren-975

    This happened to me almost exactly. Officer showed up, seemed checked-out, and I found out weeks later there was no report filed. What helped me was going back to the non-emergency line and asking to speak with the officer's supervisor. Explained the situation calmly and they actually had someone come take a formal statement from me. Took a few days but a supplemental report did eventually get created. Worth trying before you assume it's a dead end.

    • 13
      wise-marten-964

      Quick question — did you check whether the officer might have filed it under a slightly different location or time? Sometimes records offices misfiled things or it's in a different database than the public counter can see. I'm not doubting you, just want to make sure you've exhausted that before assuming it truly doesn't exist. Also, did anyone else witness the crash? A third-party witness statement could fill in some of the gap.

  • 19
    humble-heron-976

    A few things worth knowing: in most states, if a crash involves property damage over a certain threshold (usually pretty low — like $500-$1,000), there's actually a legal requirement for a report to be filed. You may be able to file a 'self-report' or civilian crash report directly with your state's DMV or transportation department. It's not the same as a police report but it creates an official record. Look up your state's form — usually a quick search like '[your state] motorist crash report form' will pull it up. That dashcam footage is your best friend right now regardless.

    • 3
      steady-neighbor275

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 20
    keen-vole-340

    That adjuster telling you to 'sit tight' for a report that doesn't exist is a delay tactic, whether they know the report is missing or not. Insurance companies benefit from claims dragging out — people get frustrated and sometimes accept lowball offers just to be done with it. Don't let them use a bureaucratic gap as an excuse to stall you indefinitely. Put everything in writing from here on out, including the fact that you confirmed with the police department that no report was filed.

  • 20
    calm-seal-708

    Worked in claims for years. Honestly, a missing police report isn't automatically a death sentence for your claim — adjusters can and do make liability decisions based on other evidence all the time. The dashcam footage alone could be decisive. What I'd do is send your adjuster a certified letter or a written email specifically stating: (1) you confirmed no police report exists, (2) you have dashcam footage available for review, and (3) you're requesting a liability decision timeline in writing. That changes the dynamic. Once it's documented that no report is coming, they don't really have an excuse to keep stalling.

    • 0
      careful-survivor499

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 22
    genuine-beaver-884

    Not legal advice, but dashcam footage is genuinely strong evidence — often stronger than a police report, which is just one officer's secondhand interpretation anyway. The fact that no report was filed doesn't mean you can't win this claim. That said, if the other carrier keeps pushing a shared-fault narrative, a free consult with a PI attorney could help you understand your options before you say or sign anything. Many work on contingency so there's no upfront cost.

    • 3
      weathered-overpass571

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 14
    candid-elk-493

    Are you physically okay? Sometimes the adrenaline masks things for days or even weeks after a crash. Even if you felt fine at the scene, it's worth seeing a doctor if you've had any stiffness, headaches, or soreness since. Getting that documented matters more than people realize — not just for your health but if any injury symptoms surface later.

    • 4
      gentle-neighbor551

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

  • 10
    careful-stoat-123

    Stop waiting. File the civilian crash report with your state DMV today. Send your dashcam video to your own insurance company in writing. If the other carrier keeps claiming you're at fault with that video evidence, get a lawyer. You've got the receipts — use them.