The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsgenuine-badger-234

Rear-ended into the car ahead of me — police report is totally wrong. What can I do?

Still kind of in shock about all of this, honestly.

So about two weeks ago I was on the highway during normal commute traffic. Things slowed down fast — construction merge ahead — and I stopped in time behind the SUV in front of me. The sedan behind me did NOT stop in time and hit me hard enough to push my car into that SUV. Classic chain reaction.

The driver behind me, the SUV driver, and I all pulled over together. The SUV driver was super cool about it and told the responding officer straight up what happened — that he watched the sedan slam into me first and push me forward. I figured that was that.

Then I got the accident report yesterday and my jaw dropped.

First, it lists me as the primary contributing factor to the crash. Me. The person sandwiched in the middle.

Second, the damage descriptions are completely backwards. My car has damage on the rear passenger side and front driver side — the report says front passenger and rear driver. For the sedan behind me, the damage was on its front driver side — report says front passenger. It's like the officer didn't even look at the cars.

The narrative section is literally two sentences. Nothing about the construction, nothing about the traffic stopping, nothing about what the SUV driver told him.

I've already called my insurance and they opened a claim, but I'm nervous about how this incorrect report is going to affect everything. Can I challenge it? Do I need a lawyer? Has anyone dealt with a report this wrong before? The SUV driver said he'd back me up but I don't know how to make that actually matter.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 19
    tidy-grouse-825

    Oh man, I went through almost the exact same thing last year — got rear-ended into the car in front of me and the report was a mess. What I did was write a formal supplement request to the police department. Most departments have a process where you can submit a written correction request with supporting evidence. I attached photos showing the actual damage and a written statement from the other driver. It didn't fix everything but it helped a lot when my insurance reviewed it.

    • 7
      calm-driver971

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 7
    quiet-marmot-561

    Be very careful right now. Your own insurance adjuster is going to lean on that report even if it's wrong — it's easier for them. Don't give a recorded statement until you've at least talked to someone about your rights. Adjusters are trained to get you to say things that sound like you're accepting partial blame. That 'primary contributor' label on a bad report can follow your claim all the way through.

  • 10
    keen-marten-964

    I worked in claims for a while and honestly, wrong damage descriptions on police reports are more common than people think — officers sometimes just circle stuff quickly or misremember. Here's what actually moves the needle for adjusters like the one who'll be reviewing your file: timestamped photos taken at the scene, any dashcam footage (yours OR the other drivers), and written witness statements. If you have even two of those three things, a smart adjuster can override a bad report. The photos especially — if your rear passenger panel is crunched and the report says rear driver, that's objectively disprovable.

    • 18
      curious-kestrel-051

      Not legal advice, but I'll say this: a police report is not a legal determination of fault. It's one piece of evidence among many, and it can be challenged. Physical evidence — damage patterns, photos, skid marks — often tells a clearer story than the narrative in a report. If the damage locations physically contradict what the report says, that inconsistency actually works in your favor when demonstrated clearly. Might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your options before you sign anything with insurance.

  • 10
    spry-dove-562

    You can typically request an amendment or supplemental addendum to a police report by contacting the officer's department directly — sometimes it goes through the records unit, sometimes the officer's supervisor. You'd submit your photos, a written account, and ideally a signed statement from the SUV driver. They won't always change the original, but a supplemental note attached to the report can carry real weight. Also, some states have a formal crash report correction process — worth googling your state's DMV or DOT site to see if that applies to you.

  • 13
    clever-fox-882

    Please don't forget to get checked out medically if you haven't already. Whiplash and soft tissue stuff from being hit twice in a chain reaction — even at lower speeds — can show up days or weeks later. Document any symptoms now, even minor ones like neck stiffness or headaches. If you end up needing treatment down the road it's much harder to connect it to the accident without early records.

  • 6
    wise-stoat-202

    This is so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. You did nothing wrong and now you're having to fight just to get the facts straight. Please take care of yourself through this — don't let the paperwork spiral take over your whole life. Reach out for help, whether that's legal help or just someone to talk to.

  • 19
    genuine-swift-577

    Three things to do right now: 1) Get that SUV driver's contact info locked down in writing and ask them to write a short signed statement. 2) Pull every photo you took at the scene and back them up somewhere safe. 3) Stop talking to any insurance adjuster — theirs OR yours — until you know where you stand. That report is wrong and provably wrong, but you need to stop the clock on anything that could lock in a bad outcome.

    • 1
      weary-optimist572

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 15
    humble-crane-999

    Did you get a dashcam recording or any photos right at the scene? Because 'the report is wrong' is a lot easier to prove when you've got timestamped images showing the actual damage. Also — did the officer talk to the SUV driver at all, or just you and the sedan driver? Trying to understand how a witness who was right there didn't end up in the narrative.