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tidy-heron-275

My brother almost died because an uninsured kid ran a red light — what do we even do now?

I'm 22 and completely overwhelmed trying to help my older brother after a crash that honestly should have killed him. He was driving home from a late shift when a teenager blew through a red light and T-boned him so hard his car spun across two lanes. The ER doctors said another few inches and it would have been a very different conversation.

Here's what makes it worse: the kid had no license, no insurance, and the car wasn't even his — apparently belonged to a family member. Police showed up, took some statements, and from what we can tell the kid gave a version of events that didn't match what two witnesses told us they saw. My brother ended up with a fractured collarbone, a concussion, and some kind of spinal strain they're still figuring out. He had to quit his second job and defer his classes for the semester.

The citation the kid got feels like a slap on the wrist compared to what my brother is living with every single day. He's in pain, he's anxious getting in any car now, and he's watching his savings drain while he can't work full hours.

I know there might be something called uninsured motorist coverage on my brother's own policy that could help, but I honestly don't know how any of this works. We don't have money to just throw at lawyers and hope for the best.

  • Does my brother have a real case even if the other driver has nothing?
  • How do we find a PI attorney who handles cases like this?
  • Should we be talking to the media to put pressure on?
  • Is there any way to hold the car's owner responsible too?

I just don't want this kid to walk away like nothing happened while my brother rebuilds his entire life. Any guidance is huge right now.

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9 replies

  • 0
    clever-swan-420

    We went through something almost identical two years ago — uninsured driver, borrowed car, the whole mess. The thing that actually helped us most was going after the car owner's insurance, not just the driver's. If the owner gave permission (or even just didn't lock up the keys), their policy can sometimes be on the hook. Definitely worth asking any attorney you talk to about that angle specifically.

  • 0
    warm-grouse-972

    Not legal advice, but a few things worth knowing: uninsured motorist (UM) coverage on your brother's own policy is often the most reliable recovery path when the at-fault driver has nothing. The car owner's liability is a real theory too — it's called 'negligent entrustment' in a lot of states. Most PI attorneys work on contingency, meaning no upfront cost. Talk to a few before committing to anyone.

  • 0
    tidy-bison-184

    Please tell your brother to be very careful talking to ANY insurance company right now — including his own. Even your own carrier can try to minimize a UM claim. Don't give a recorded statement without understanding exactly what you're agreeing to. They're not on your side just because you pay them premiums.

  • 0
    clever-stoat-465

    I worked claims for years. When an uninsured driver is involved and the car was borrowed, we always looked hard at whether the vehicle owner's policy covered permissive use. A lot of families assume it does automatically — it doesn't always. The policy language matters a lot. An attorney can pull those documents faster than you can and know what to look for.

  • 0
    silent-grouse-083

    A couple of practical steps that will matter later: make sure your brother keeps every single receipt and document related to this — ER bills, follow-up visits, prescription costs, even parking at the hospital. Also get a copy of the official police report as soon as it's available; you can usually request it online through the department that responded. If witnesses gave contact info, hold onto that tightly. All of this becomes evidence.

  • 0
    quick-heron-501

    The anxiety about being in cars after a crash like that is really common — it's not weakness, it's a normal trauma response. I'd encourage him to mention it explicitly to his doctors and get it documented as part of his injury record. Mental health treatment related to the crash is part of damages, but only if it's in his medical records. Don't let him brush it off as 'just nerves.'

  • 0
    plain-crane-222

    I'm so sorry. You're carrying so much right now trying to fight for him while he recovers. Please don't forget to take care of yourself too. The fact that you're asking these questions and doing this research for him — he's lucky to have you in his corner.

  • 0
    tidy-marmot-023

    Skip the media for now — that's a last resort and can actually complicate things legally if a case is in progress. Focus on two things first: get the police report, and get a free consult with a PI lawyer who handles uninsured motorist cases. Most will do it for free. Media pressure doesn't pay his medical bills; a solid case strategy might.

  • 0
    spry-elk-860

    Do you know for certain there's no insurance at all on that vehicle? Sometimes people assume there's none because the driver said so at the scene, but the registered owner might actually have a policy that the kid didn't mention. Worth verifying through the DMV or an attorney before assuming the worst-case scenario on coverage.