The Shoulder
The Shoulder
70
calm-badger-799

Other driver told me to forget it — now I'm being accused of leaving the scene??

I'm honestly still in shock and don't know what to do.

About six weeks ago I was driving home on the highway during a really bad traffic backup. Everything was basically stopped and I rolled forward maybe half a car length and lightly bumped the pickup truck in front of me — we're talking a slow crawl, barely moving. I got out immediately, we both looked at both vehicles, and there was literally nothing to see. A tiny paint transfer on his rear bumper that honestly looked like it had been there a while.

The guy was totally calm. He told me he wasn't worried about it and that we should both just get back in our cars because people behind us were getting impatient. I offered to exchange info and he waved me off. Said something like "don't stress it, it's nothing." So I got back in my car and we both drove off.

Fast forward to this week — I get a letter from the county sheriff's department saying I'm being investigated for leaving the scene of an accident. Apparently the other driver called it in afterward. Hit and run. On what was essentially a 2 mph tap that HE told me to forget about.

I have no dashcam footage (I know, I know — getting one tonight), and there were no witnesses I can point to. It's basically my word against his.

Has anyone dealt with anything like this? Should I call the detective before talking to anyone else? I'm genuinely nervous and I really don't want this turning into something criminal when I did everything right in the moment.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 15
    genuine-newt-846

    Oh man, this is almost exactly what happened to my brother-in-law. The other driver was friendly at the scene, said don't worry about it, and then apparently had a change of heart once he got home and thought about the body damage he'd been meaning to fix. Please do not call that detective without talking to a lawyer first. Seriously. Even if you're 100% innocent, anything you say can be twisted.

    • 19
      clear-bison-885

      I used to work claims and this scenario came across my desk more than once. When there's no police report filed at the scene, the person who calls it in first basically controls the narrative. The detective has heard one version of events already. That doesn't mean you're sunk — it just means you need to be really deliberate about how you tell your side. Documentation of anything, even a quick note you wrote down right after it happened, could help establish your account.

  • 7
    sharp-wren-866

    Not legal advice, but as a general matter — you have the right to speak with an attorney before responding to any law enforcement inquiry, even when you're not under arrest. A letter giving you 30 days to respond is not an emergency. Use that time wisely. The fact that you stopped, got out, and the other party verbally dismissed the incident may be very relevant, but how you present that matters. Consult someone before you make that call.

  • 14
    hearty-grouse-861

    The timing here is suspicious. Six weeks later, out of nowhere? I'd bet anything this guy got a repair estimate, realized his truck had more issues than just that scuff, and decided to make a phone call. Don't assume good faith from anyone involved at this point — not the other driver, not necessarily even the investigators who are working off a one-sided complaint.

  • 12
    quick-swift-737

    Two things: 1) Don't call that detective alone. 2) Go buy a dashcam today, not tonight. Learn from this the hard way so you don't have to learn it a harder way later. The "we agreed to just let it go" verbal handshake means nothing without proof.

  • 18
    calm-seal-911

    I know you're focused on the legal side and that makes total sense, but please also keep an eye on your own stress levels here. Situations like this — where you feel like you did the right thing and are still being punished — can mess with your sleep and anxiety in a real way. Reach out to people you trust while this gets sorted out. You shouldn't be carrying this alone.

  • 21
    plain-marmot-373

    A few things worth knowing: leaving the scene charges usually hinge on whether you fulfilled your "duty to exchange information" after an accident. The fact that you stopped, got out, and offered to exchange info — and he declined — is actually meaningful. Whether that holds up depends on how it's documented and presented. A lot of attorneys will do a free consult for something like this, and it's worth at least one conversation before you respond to that letter.

    • 7
      grounded-backseat502

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 17
    warm-seal-161

    Did you at least get his plate number before driving away? Or take any photos of the vehicles at the scene? I'm not doubting your account, but "he told me to forget it" is going to need something behind it if it comes down to your word versus his. What did the letter actually say — is this a criminal investigation or more of an insurance-related inquiry?

    • 7
      level-backseat896

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 15
    bright-finch-327

    This is so unfair and I'm really sorry you're dealing with it. You literally did everything a decent person would do — you stopped, you checked on him, you offered to handle it properly — and this is what you get. I hope it works out. Please update us.

    • 9
      careful-survivor793

      How long did it end up taking in your case?