The Shoulder
The Shoulder
51
candid-beaver-149

Semi blew a tire on the highway and showered my car with debris — driver never stopped. Now what?

I was cruising on the interstate last Tuesday doing everything right, minding my own business, when a semi a few car lengths ahead of me had a catastrophic blowout on one of its rear tires. The whole thing exploded and chunks of rubber and shrapnel went flying everywhere. A massive piece slammed into my hood and I got peppered with debris across the whole front end — hood, grille, both headlights. One chunk cracked my windshield pretty good.

The truck did NOT stop. Just kept rolling. I managed to get a partial plate and the name of the carrier painted on the trailer door, but I was shaking so bad I'm not 100% sure I got all the digits right.

Called the state patrol, they came out, were decent enough, but told me since nobody was hurt and the other driver didn't stop, they wouldn't file a formal accident report — just an "information only" call log that apparently doesn't count as an official report.

Now my insurance company is telling me without a police report or the other driver's info they may have to process it as an uninsured motorist claim, which would ding my record and I'd owe my deductible. That feels completely wrong — I didn't do anything here.

A few things I'm wondering:

  • Can I track down the trucking company using just the carrier name on the trailer?
  • Is there any federal database for commercial trucking that could help identify the truck?
  • Should I be pushing harder on the state patrol to do more?
  • Anyone dealt with their own insurance trying to pull this kind of move?

I'm frustrated and honestly feel like I'm being punished for someone else's negligence. Any advice from people who've been through something similar would be huge.

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9 replies

  • 17
    swift-crow-441

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me a couple years back — gator chunk off a semi, smashed my front bumper. The carrier name on the side of the trailer was honestly the golden ticket. I called the FMCSA hotline (they regulate commercial trucking federally) and with just the carrier name they could pull up the company's DOT number, registered address, everything. From there I found their insurance carrier. It took some persistence but I tracked it all down without a police report. Don't give up on that carrier name.

  • 14
    plain-raven-008

    The FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) has a public lookup tool at safer.fmcsa.dot.gov — you can search by carrier name and it'll give you the company's DOT number, their registered agent, and their insurance info. Commercial carriers are required by federal law to maintain liability insurance and it's all on file. That insurance is separate from whatever your own policy does, so you could potentially go directly after their liability coverage. The partial plate might also be enough if you pair it with the carrier name to narrow it down — a PI attorney could possibly subpoena records.

    • 15
      careful-newt-308

      Not legal advice, but just so you know — trucking companies are held to a higher standard than regular drivers under federal motor carrier regulations. If that blowout was caused by a tire that wasn't properly inspected or maintained, the company could have real liability here. The FMCSA database the others mentioned is legit. If you can identify the carrier, their insurer has to respond. The "uninsured motorist" framing from your own insurance sounds premature to me. Worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney who handles trucking cases before you let your insurer control the narrative.

    • 12
      warm-badger-067

      Please do not let your insurance company rush you into filing this as a UM claim before you've exhausted every option to find that trucking company. Once it's filed that way it's really hard to undo, and depending on your state it can still affect your rates even though you're 100% the victim. Stall them if you have to. Tell them you need more time to investigate. They work for you — don't forget that.

  • 12
    tidy-marten-080

    I used to work claims and honestly the "no report, no other driver info" line your insurer is giving you is partly a pressure tactic. They want you to just roll over and take the UM claim so they can close the file fast. If you can identify that trucking company — even with just the carrier name — their commercial auto insurer becomes the target and YOUR insurer's obligation potentially changes. Push back. Tell them you are actively working to identify the at-fault carrier. Ask them to hold the file open. Get that in writing if you can.

  • 10
    quiet-heron-905

    Just want to ask — are you doing okay physically? Even if you feel fine right now, the adrenaline from something like that can mask soreness and stiffness for 24-48 hours. Whiplash-type symptoms from the sudden startle/swerve response can show up delayed. If anything starts hurting in your neck, shoulders, or back in the next few days, please go get checked out and make sure it's documented. Don't just push through it.

  • 21
    patient-tern-517

    Three things to do right now: 1) Search that carrier name on the FMCSA site tonight. 2) Write down every single detail you remember about the truck while it's fresh — color, number of axles, any markings, approximate time and mile marker. 3) Go back to the stretch of highway and see if there's any business with a parking lot camera or a DOT traffic camera in the area. State DOTs sometimes have footage they don't advertise. Move fast on the cameras — that footage gets overwritten quickly.

  • 11
    plain-hare-563

    Quick question — when you say you got the carrier name off the trailer, was it the name on the cab door or the trailer door? Sometimes the cab and trailer are owned by totally different companies, which can complicate things. Also was there any logo or DOT number visible anywhere on the truck itself? Even a partial DOT number narrows it way down.

    • 0
      grounded-offramp264

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.