police report is wrong DC VirginiaWhat if the police report is wrong?

Police reports are wrong all the time. I have a client who was hit by a car while he was in a crosswalk in a suburban area. There was no pedestrian signal. My client was blamed in the police report for crossing against a light that did not exist! (A quick FOIA for the 911 audio revealed the truth.) Another potential client called me the other day and told me he had been scared to call an attorney because he thought the police report would blame him. In another case, my client doesn’t speak English well and he was blamed for the crash – the officer never even interviewed him.

Here’s the thing – a police report is useful to a personal injury attorney because it will identify the address of all of the people involved, to hopefully diagram where the accident occurred, and to identify everyone’s insurance information. Quite frankly, that’s about it.

Police reports don’t come into evidence at trial. They are hearsay. This means they are statements made out of court,  so they are lacking in legal credibility. 99 times out of 100 the police officer didn’t see the accident. So the report is just regurgitating what other people told the officer. Identifying who was cited for the accident can be useful. And a citation can be admissible as evidence if liability for the crash ends up being contested. But errors in the police report? No big deal. 

This is especially true in the District of Columbia. In Virginia and Maryland, being even 1% responsible for your own injuries means you cannot recover against the person that is 99% responsible. This is also the case in DC except for cases involving "vulnerable users," like cyclists and pedestrians. As long as vulnerable users are less than 50% responsible, they can recover – you can read more about the update to DC’s contributory negligence law here. A police officer makes a decision on the fly regarding who to cite in a crash or accident. They don’t have all the evidence. In the civil discovery process, we get all the evidence. We can find out exactly what, for example, a defendant‘s blood alcohol content is. Or interview witnesses under oath. Or get surveillance footage. We can also subpoena cell phone records, or sometimes even get “black box” data from involved vehicles. Clients also got the chance to explain what happened without being pumped full of adrenaline at best or severely injured at worst. For these reasons, police reports aren't make-or-break documents, they are just a part of the story. 

What should you do if the police report is wrong?

Here is the decision tree:

Were you hurt? Let your car accident lawyer handle it. Most likely, your lawyer won’t be concerned.

Are you uninjured but angry? You can contact the officer and ask them to correct the report, but don’t expect them to cooperate. Police officers are busy, and re-doing a police report and re-submitting it to a supervisor to explain a mistake they made that a citizen pointed out isn’t going to make it to the top of the priority list.

My advice is generally to let it go. The energy you spend dealing with correcting a police report has a better chance of making the world a safer place if you use it advocating for safer streets.

If you've held off on contacting a personal injury attorney for help after an accident because the police report isn't on your side, wait no more! Email that report to [email protected] and we can set up a time to talk about it. 

 

Join The Conversation
Post A Comment