The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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gentle-stoat-170

Witnessed a hit-and-run this morning — uploaded my dashcam footage, now what?

So I was driving to work today, totally normal Tuesday, when I saw the whole thing happen right in front of me. A silver sedan clipped a car waiting at a red light, the impact was hard enough that the stopped car got pushed sideways, and then the silver sedan just... kept going. Didn't slow down, didn't pull over, nothing.

The person who got hit looked really shaken up. I pulled over immediately and stayed with them until the police arrived. I gave a statement and handed over my contact info, but here's the thing — my dashcam caught the whole sequence, including what I'm pretty sure is a readable plate on the fleeing vehicle.

I already shared the footage with the officer on scene, but I'm wondering if I should do anything else with it. A few questions rattling around in my head:

  • Should I keep a personal backup copy somewhere safe?
  • Is there any reason the victim might need me to submit this footage somewhere beyond just the police report?
  • Could I somehow end up being dragged into a lawsuit as a witness?
  • If the hit-and-run driver is never found, does the victim have any real options?

I don't know this person at all — just a stranger I happened to be behind at the right (wrong?) moment. But I feel weirdly responsible for making sure this footage actually helps them. Feels awful watching someone get hit and just abandoned like that.

Anyone been through something like this from either side?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 19
    tidy-wren-629

    I was the victim in a hit-and-run about two years ago and I wish to god someone had dashcam footage like yours. The witness who stopped for me was incredibly helpful just by staying and giving a statement, but without video the police basically said they couldn't do much. You staying and handing that over could genuinely change everything for this person. Keep a backup copy — cloud, hard drive, whatever. Don't rely on the police to preserve it forever.

    • 13
      daring-dove-454

      Honestly you sound like such a good person for stopping and staying. A lot of people just drive past. I hope the person who got hit is okay and that your footage leads to something. It's stressful being involved even as a witness — don't forget to take care of yourself too.

    • 8
      honest-parent133

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 16
    patient-badger-830

    Definitely keep your own copy of that footage. Police evidence systems are not always well-organized and things can get lost or be hard to retrieve later. If the victim ends up filing an insurance claim or a civil suit, their attorney will likely want to subpoena your footage or ask you to provide it voluntarily. Being a fact witness in a civil case is usually pretty low-stakes — you'd just describe what you saw. You shouldn't need your own attorney for that unless something unusual comes up.

  • 7
    warm-crow-079

    Not legal advice, but as a general matter: eyewitness dashcam footage is often the single most valuable piece of evidence in a hit-and-run case. The victim's attorney — if they get one — will almost certainly want to reach you. If the at-fault driver is identified, that footage could establish liability pretty cleanly. Your risk of being 'dragged into' anything as a neutral witness is low. Good on you for stopping.

    • 6
      quiet-optimist672

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 11
    cool-bison-629

    If the hit-and-run driver gets found and has insurance, watch out — their insurer may try to contact you directly to get your account of events. You don't have to talk to them. You're not a party to any claim. Be careful about giving recorded statements to anyone other than police without knowing whose interests they're actually serving.

    • 9
      tired-dreamer791

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 8
    swift-otter-504

    Back up that footage in at least two places today. Not tomorrow. Today. Memory cards fail, phones get dropped, laptops get stolen. The rest of your questions are worth thinking about but none of them matter if the footage disappears.

  • 12
    tidy-marmot-153

    From my time on the claims side: if the fleeing driver is never identified, the victim will likely file under their own uninsured motorist coverage. In that situation, corroborating witness evidence — including dashcam footage — matters a lot because some policies require proof that another vehicle was actually involved. Without it, UM claims for hit-and-runs can get complicated. So your footage could help even if the driver is never caught.

  • 9
    genuine-finch-408

    Did the police actually review the footage on scene or just take your info and move on? Asking because there's a difference between 'we'll follow up' and them actually pulling the plate and running it before the trail goes cold. If it felt like they were brushing it off, it might be worth a follow-up call to the non-emergency line.