The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancespry-fox-138

I rear-ended someone but they robbed me at the scene — now insurance is making me nervous

Still kind of shaken writing this out, but here goes.

I tapped the back of another car at a slow-moving intersection — totally my fault on the initial contact, I own that. Minor bump, both cars pulled off to the side. But the second I got out to check on everyone, things went sideways fast.

The other driver and his passenger got aggressive immediately. Demanding cash on the spot, getting in my face, blocking me from getting back in my car. At some point one of them grabbed my phone right out of my hand. When I said I was calling the police they laughed and said go ahead. Then they just… left. Drove off with my phone.

I flagged down a passing driver who let me borrow theirs. Cops came, took my statement, reviewed some nearby business camera footage, and actually tracked down the other driver. Officer told me at the scene that the way everything played out — the theft, the aggression, leaving the scene — was going to factor into how the report read. The other driver ended up cited for leaving the scene and a few other things.

Here's my anxiety: I still made the initial contact. I'm terrified my insurance is going to look at this and just slap me with full liability and raise my rates through the roof. The other car has some damage and I'm sure a claim is coming.

Has anyone dealt with something like this where the fault picture got complicated by stuff that happened after the collision itself? Does the police report actually carry weight with the insurance companies, or do they just do their own thing anyway?

8replies

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8 replies

  • 12
    calm-finch-913

    Oh man, I had something go sideways at a scene too — not robbery level but the other driver lied through his teeth to the adjuster and I had to fight for weeks. The police report saved me. Get a certified copy of yours ASAP and read every single line. If the responding officer noted the theft and the other driver's behavior, that documentation is huge. Don't let your adjuster brush past it.

  • 23
    silent-newt-497

    I used to work claims, so let me give you the inside view. Adjusters are trained to assign fault on the collision itself — meaning the initial contact — separate from any criminal activity that followed. That can genuinely work against you here if you have an adjuster who just rubber-stamps it as a standard rear-end and closes it fast without reading the full report.

    What you want to do is proactively send your adjuster the police report number, mention the theft charge and the leaving-the-scene citation explicitly in your first conversation, and ask them to note it in your file. Don't wait for them to find it. Make them acknowledge it. Adjusters work fast and miss things all the time.

    • 12
      brave-owl-217

      Not legal advice, but this fact pattern is more nuanced than a standard rear-end. The subsequent theft and the other party's conduct could be relevant to comparative fault and to any counterclaim they might try to file. If the other side comes at you with a bodily injury claim, it would genuinely be worth a free consult with a PI attorney before you say anything to their insurer. Most will do a quick call at no charge just to help you understand your exposure.

  • 14
    curious-badger-182

    Please don't just trust your own insurance company to advocate for you here. They have their own interests. The moment you filed the claim you became a cost to them, not a person. Get everything in writing, record call dates and rep names, and if they try to push full liability without addressing the criminal element — push back hard.

  • 9
    clear-owl-210

    Whatever happens with the insurance stuff — please make sure you got checked out. Adrenaline from a scary scene like that masks a lot. People often feel fine for 24-48 hours and then neck or back stuff creeps in. Go see your doctor and describe everything, including the physical stress of the confrontation. Get it in your records now rather than trying to connect dots later.

    • 11
      candid-fox-410

      Bottom line: you rear-ended them, so yes, expect some fault assignment on the collision. That's likely unavoidable. But theft and leaving the scene are serious charges that complicate their ability to come after you aggressively. Don't volunteer extra information to their insurer, don't apologize to anyone beyond what you've already said, and let the police report do its job.

    • 8
      quiet-otter-022

      I just want to say — what you went through sounds genuinely terrifying. Getting robbed and threatened when you were already stressed about the accident? That's a lot to handle. I hope you're doing okay emotionally on top of all this logistical nightmare. Sending good thoughts your way.

  • 13
    curious-marmot-727

    A few practical steps that'll help regardless of how this shakes out: (1) Write down everything you remember about the incident right now while it's fresh — timeline, what was said, physical descriptions, sequence of events. (2) Get the full police report including any supplement reports filed after the initial call. (3) If there was business camera footage the officers reviewed, ask if it was preserved or if you need to request it directly. Evidence like that disappears fast. (4) Keep a folder — digital is fine — with every piece of correspondence from both insurance companies.