Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Insurance companies go based off the police report and 100% of the time the cops are going to cite the person in the back who is following way too closely. Even if you have a dash cam video all it’s going to show is you tailgating the driver in front of you.
I wouldn’t brake check anyone in my safe, modern Euro SUV (let alone a 15yo Camry like the PP), but you tailgaters who think the cops are going to do some CSI-worthy accident reconstruction are in for a rude awakening.
If you're going the speed limit and keeping acceptable following distance, you will still hit the car in front of you if they slam their brakes hard for no reason.
You don't need CSI accident reconstruction to see that the person in front was driving dangerously, and then it's a question of whether it was a deliberate attempt to defraud or they are "just" a totally incompetent driver.
Insurance companies love dashcam footage and will absolutely accept it if you have it.
I worked for State Farm as a claims investigator.
If you hit someone, you're at fault. Period. Whether they stomped on their brakes intentionally or not. You are responsible for NOT hitting them from behind, regardless of what they do or how fast they stop. If you can't stop in time, that's because you didn't leave enough distance. Period. Done.
What if someone cuts into your safe space and then brakes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Insurance companies go based off the police report and 100% of the time the cops are going to cite the person in the back who is following way too closely. Even if you have a dash cam video all it’s going to show is you tailgating the driver in front of you.
I wouldn’t brake check anyone in my safe, modern Euro SUV (let alone a 15yo Camry like the PP), but you tailgaters who think the cops are going to do some CSI-worthy accident reconstruction are in for a rude awakening.
If you're going the speed limit and keeping acceptable following distance, you will still hit the car in front of you if they slam their brakes hard for no reason.
You don't need CSI accident reconstruction to see that the person in front was driving dangerously, and then it's a question of whether it was a deliberate attempt to defraud or they are "just" a totally incompetent driver.
Insurance companies love dashcam footage and will absolutely accept it if you have it.
I worked for State Farm as a claims investigator.
If you hit someone, you're at fault. Period. Whether they stomped on their brakes intentionally or not. You are responsible for NOT hitting them from behind, regardless of what they do or how fast they stop. If you can't stop in time, that's because you didn't leave enough distance. Period. Done.
Anonymous wrote:If you're in the middle lane of route 1 thru Old Town during rush hour the 'i thought i saw a deer' line won't work.
Deer are not everywhere all the time, genius.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Insurance companies go based off the police report and 100% of the time the cops are going to cite the person in the back who is following way too closely. Even if you have a dash cam video all it’s going to show is you tailgating the driver in front of you.
I wouldn’t brake check anyone in my safe, modern Euro SUV (let alone a 15yo Camry like the PP), but you tailgaters who think the cops are going to do some CSI-worthy accident reconstruction are in for a rude awakening.
If you're going the speed limit and keeping acceptable following distance, you will still hit the car in front of you if they slam their brakes hard for no reason.
You don't need CSI accident reconstruction to see that the person in front was driving dangerously, and then it's a question of whether it was a deliberate attempt to defraud or they are "just" a totally incompetent driver.
Insurance companies love dashcam footage and will absolutely accept it if you have it.
I thought I saw a deer running into my path so I hit my brakes negates any claim of fraud.
Depends what the video shows, fool.
How would you prove the other person didn’t think they saw a deer? I’m not sure PP is the fool.
Easy. I am not at liberty to help you commit insurance fraud.
Not looking to commit insurance fraud nor do I tailgate, I’m just letting you know that if you have a dash cam video of the car in front of you stopping suddenly and you plow into it all the driver in front has to claim is “I thought I saw a deer” and I can guarantee the cops will cite you for following too closely and your insurance company will make payments based on the narrative in the police report and the video of you plowing into them. Continue tailgating, no skin off my back if you run into the PP in the 2003 Camry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Insurance companies go based off the police report and 100% of the time the cops are going to cite the person in the back who is following way too closely. Even if you have a dash cam video all it’s going to show is you tailgating the driver in front of you.
I wouldn’t brake check anyone in my safe, modern Euro SUV (let alone a 15yo Camry like the PP), but you tailgaters who think the cops are going to do some CSI-worthy accident reconstruction are in for a rude awakening.
If you're going the speed limit and keeping acceptable following distance, you will still hit the car in front of you if they slam their brakes hard for no reason.
You don't need CSI accident reconstruction to see that the person in front was driving dangerously, and then it's a question of whether it was a deliberate attempt to defraud or they are "just" a totally incompetent driver.
Insurance companies love dashcam footage and will absolutely accept it if you have it.
I worked for State Farm as a claims investigator.
If you hit someone, you're at fault. Period. Whether they stomped on their brakes intentionally or not. You are responsible for NOT hitting them from behind, regardless of what they do or how fast they stop. If you can't stop in time, that's because you didn't leave enough distance. Period. Done.
Depends on the state. I know someone who owns an insurance firm. You need to get your information straight. State Farm is not the most picky of the bunch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Insurance companies go based off the police report and 100% of the time the cops are going to cite the person in the back who is following way too closely. Even if you have a dash cam video all it’s going to show is you tailgating the driver in front of you.
I wouldn’t brake check anyone in my safe, modern Euro SUV (let alone a 15yo Camry like the PP), but you tailgaters who think the cops are going to do some CSI-worthy accident reconstruction are in for a rude awakening.
If you're going the speed limit and keeping acceptable following distance, you will still hit the car in front of you if they slam their brakes hard for no reason.
You don't need CSI accident reconstruction to see that the person in front was driving dangerously, and then it's a question of whether it was a deliberate attempt to defraud or they are "just" a totally incompetent driver.
Insurance companies love dashcam footage and will absolutely accept it if you have it.
I thought I saw a deer running into my path so I hit my brakes negates any claim of fraud.
Depends what the video shows, fool.
How would you prove the other person didn’t think they saw a deer? I’m not sure PP is the fool.
Easy. I am not at liberty to help you commit insurance fraud.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Insurance companies go based off the police report and 100% of the time the cops are going to cite the person in the back who is following way too closely. Even if you have a dash cam video all it’s going to show is you tailgating the driver in front of you.
I wouldn’t brake check anyone in my safe, modern Euro SUV (let alone a 15yo Camry like the PP), but you tailgaters who think the cops are going to do some CSI-worthy accident reconstruction are in for a rude awakening.
If you're going the speed limit and keeping acceptable following distance, you will still hit the car in front of you if they slam their brakes hard for no reason.
You don't need CSI accident reconstruction to see that the person in front was driving dangerously, and then it's a question of whether it was a deliberate attempt to defraud or they are "just" a totally incompetent driver.
Insurance companies love dashcam footage and will absolutely accept it if you have it.
I thought I saw a deer running into my path so I hit my brakes negates any claim of fraud.
Depends what the video shows, fool.
How would you prove the other person didn’t think they saw a deer? I’m not sure PP is the fool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Insurance companies go based off the police report and 100% of the time the cops are going to cite the person in the back who is following way too closely. Even if you have a dash cam video all it’s going to show is you tailgating the driver in front of you.
I wouldn’t brake check anyone in my safe, modern Euro SUV (let alone a 15yo Camry like the PP), but you tailgaters who think the cops are going to do some CSI-worthy accident reconstruction are in for a rude awakening.
It is not 100%, that is what you do not understand. Video will win this one. Actually, cops rely on video for almost everything these days. Have you been under a rock for the last decade, or two or more?
You seem pretty confident in your hypothesis that you can read-end other drivers with impunity as long as there’s a video of them stopping suddenly, so why don’t you get a $100 dash cam off Amazon and find some MD-tagged moron on I270 that you can use as a test case?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Insurance companies go based off the police report and 100% of the time the cops are going to cite the person in the back who is following way too closely. Even if you have a dash cam video all it’s going to show is you tailgating the driver in front of you.
I wouldn’t brake check anyone in my safe, modern Euro SUV (let alone a 15yo Camry like the PP), but you tailgaters who think the cops are going to do some CSI-worthy accident reconstruction are in for a rude awakening.
If you're going the speed limit and keeping acceptable following distance, you will still hit the car in front of you if they slam their brakes hard for no reason.
You don't need CSI accident reconstruction to see that the person in front was driving dangerously, and then it's a question of whether it was a deliberate attempt to defraud or they are "just" a totally incompetent driver.
Insurance companies love dashcam footage and will absolutely accept it if you have it.
I thought I saw a deer running into my path so I hit my brakes negates any claim of fraud.
Depends what the video shows, fool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Insurance companies go based off the police report and 100% of the time the cops are going to cite the person in the back who is following way too closely. Even if you have a dash cam video all it’s going to show is you tailgating the driver in front of you.
I wouldn’t brake check anyone in my safe, modern Euro SUV (let alone a 15yo Camry like the PP), but you tailgaters who think the cops are going to do some CSI-worthy accident reconstruction are in for a rude awakening.
It is not 100%, that is what you do not understand. Video will win this one. Actually, cops rely on video for almost everything these days. Have you been under a rock for the last decade, or two or more?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Insurance companies go based off the police report and 100% of the time the cops are going to cite the person in the back who is following way too closely. Even if you have a dash cam video all it’s going to show is you tailgating the driver in front of you.
I wouldn’t brake check anyone in my safe, modern Euro SUV (let alone a 15yo Camry like the PP), but you tailgaters who think the cops are going to do some CSI-worthy accident reconstruction are in for a rude awakening.
If you're going the speed limit and keeping acceptable following distance, you will still hit the car in front of you if they slam their brakes hard for no reason.
You don't need CSI accident reconstruction to see that the person in front was driving dangerously, and then it's a question of whether it was a deliberate attempt to defraud or they are "just" a totally incompetent driver.
Insurance companies love dashcam footage and will absolutely accept it if you have it.
I worked for State Farm as a claims investigator.
If you hit someone, you're at fault. Period. Whether they stomped on their brakes intentionally or not. You are responsible for NOT hitting them from behind, regardless of what they do or how fast they stop. If you can't stop in time, that's because you didn't leave enough distance. Period. Done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Insurance companies go based off the police report and 100% of the time the cops are going to cite the person in the back who is following way too closely. Even if you have a dash cam video all it’s going to show is you tailgating the driver in front of you.
I wouldn’t brake check anyone in my safe, modern Euro SUV (let alone a 15yo Camry like the PP), but you tailgaters who think the cops are going to do some CSI-worthy accident reconstruction are in for a rude awakening.
If you're going the speed limit and keeping acceptable following distance, you will still hit the car in front of you if they slam their brakes hard for no reason.
You don't need CSI accident reconstruction to see that the person in front was driving dangerously, and then it's a question of whether it was a deliberate attempt to defraud or they are "just" a totally incompetent driver.
Insurance companies love dashcam footage and will absolutely accept it if you have it.
I thought I saw a deer running into my path so I hit my brakes negates any claim of fraud.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Insurance companies go based off the police report and 100% of the time the cops are going to cite the person in the back who is following way too closely. Even if you have a dash cam video all it’s going to show is you tailgating the driver in front of you.
I wouldn’t brake check anyone in my safe, modern Euro SUV (let alone a 15yo Camry like the PP), but you tailgaters who think the cops are going to do some CSI-worthy accident reconstruction are in for a rude awakening.
If you're going the speed limit and keeping acceptable following distance, you will still hit the car in front of you if they slam their brakes hard for no reason.
You don't need CSI accident reconstruction to see that the person in front was driving dangerously, and then it's a question of whether it was a deliberate attempt to defraud or they are "just" a totally incompetent driver.
Insurance companies love dashcam footage and will absolutely accept it if you have it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Insurance companies go based off the police report and 100% of the time the cops are going to cite the person in the back who is following way too closely. Even if you have a dash cam video all it’s going to show is you tailgating the driver in front of you.
I wouldn’t brake check anyone in my safe, modern Euro SUV (let alone a 15yo Camry like the PP), but you tailgaters who think the cops are going to do some CSI-worthy accident reconstruction are in for a rude awakening.
If you're going the speed limit and keeping acceptable following distance, you will still hit the car in front of you if they slam their brakes hard for no reason.
You don't need CSI accident reconstruction to see that the person in front was driving dangerously, and then it's a question of whether it was a deliberate attempt to defraud or they are "just" a totally incompetent driver.
Insurance companies love dashcam footage and will absolutely accept it if you have it.
If you plow into the person in front of you because they slam on the brakes (even if it’s intentional) you are following too closely for the vehicle you’re in, end of story. A dashcam video will show you following too closely and rear-ending the driver in front of you.