The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
quiet-newt-870

Other driver literally made up a story on the spot — police agreed with me, so why do I feel crazy?

I need to vent because this whole situation has me second-guessing everything even though I know I didn't do anything wrong.

So I was driving through a neighborhood, normal speed, minding my business. A car pulled out of a private driveway onto the road and clipped my front end. Pretty straightforward, right? The officer showed up, took both our statements, looked at the positioning of the vehicles, and told us flat-out that the other driver was responsible for yielding before entering the road.

Here's where it gets wild. The other driver started off saying she "barely moved" and I must have swerved into her. Then — in the same conversation — she switched to claiming I saw her pulling out and deliberately accelerated to cut her off. Like, pick a story.

The officer didn't buy it either. It's in the report.

But then I go to exchange insurance info and the card she hands me has a policy number that comes back as cancelled when I try to verify it. So now I'm dealing with potentially uninsured driver territory on top of everything else.

I have uninsured motorist coverage so I'm not completely stuck, but it still stings. My car needs bodywork, I've got a stiff neck that I'm hoping is nothing serious, and I'm the one jumping through hoops.

Has anyone dealt with someone who just refused to accept fault even when law enforcement spelled it out for them? And what happens when the insurance info turns out to be bogus? Do I just go straight to my own insurer at that point?

10replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

10 replies

  • 17
    silent-badger-419

    Ugh, I'm so sorry. The part about her changing her story mid-conversation is just infuriating. You're not crazy — you have a police report backing you up. Try not to let her chaos make you doubt yourself.

  • 16
    kind-marmot-713

    The fake insurance thing happened to me too and honestly it's more common than people realize. I went straight to my own insurance with the police report and they handled it under my uninsured motorist coverage. It was annoying because I still had to pay my deductible upfront, but I did eventually get reimbursed. Keep every single document you have.

    • 6
      mellow-late-shift604

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 13
    quick-sparrow-022

    I worked claims for years. When the other driver's insurance comes back as cancelled or fake, the file basically gets kicked over to the UM unit pretty quickly. The thing most people don't know is that your own insurer may still try to find and subrogate against the at-fault driver later — meaning they go after her to recover what they paid you. That process has nothing to do with you, but it means you should cooperate fully and document everything because your insurer may need it later.

    • 5
      calm-neighbor567

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 12
    swift-tern-705

    File the claim with your own insurance today if you haven't already. Attach the police report. Get a doctor's appointment on the calendar before the week is out. Stop trying to reason with the other driver — she's not going to come around, and you don't need her to. The report does the talking.

  • 8
    steady-sparrow-372

    Not legal advice, but a police report clearly placing fault on the other driver plus documented fake insurance info is actually a meaningful starting point if this escalates. The shifting stories also matter — inconsistency like that tends to hurt credibility. If your neck doesn't resolve quickly, it's worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney before you accept anything from your UM carrier. Most won't charge you unless they recover something.

  • 7
    warm-wolf-529

    Please don't brush off the stiff neck. I see people come in days or even a week after a collision with injuries that felt like "just soreness" at first. Whiplash symptoms can peak 48-72 hours after impact. Get checked out by a doctor soon — not just for your health but because a gap in medical care can complicate things down the road if the injury turns out to be more significant.

    • 17
      brave-badger-522

      Did you actually get a copy of the official police report yet, or just what the officer said at the scene? Those can sometimes read differently than the verbal summary. Also curious — did anyone get photos of the vehicle positions before anything moved? That stuff matters a lot when the other side starts spinning a different story.

  • 6
    patient-kestrel-707

    Just a heads up — even when you go through your own UM coverage, your adjuster is still trying to settle as cheap as possible. They're not your friend just because you pay them premiums. Don't give a recorded statement without knowing exactly what you're agreeing to, and don't let them pressure you into a quick payout before you know how your neck is actually doing.