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spry-finch-031

Hit-and-run driver got convicted but I've seen almost nothing from the restitution order — is this normal?

I'm going to try to keep this coherent because honestly just writing it out makes me frustrated all over again.

About four years ago I was on my way home from a late shift when someone sideswiped me hard enough to spin my car into a guardrail. The other driver took off. Witnesses got a partial plate and the police actually tracked the guy down within a few days — and here's the part that still makes my blood boil — he had already taken the car to a body shop to get the damaged panels repainted. Told investigators the scrapes were from a shopping cart. A shopping cart. The damage was across an entire door and quarter panel.

He eventually pled guilty. The court ordered him to pay restitution covering my medical bills, lost wages, and some other documented losses. I remember feeling like, okay, at least there's some accountability here.

Fast forward to now: I've received maybe 15% of what was ordered. The payments trickle in randomly — sometimes nothing for six months, then a small deposit. My attorney at the time said the court doesn't really enforce collection the way you'd expect. I've had two follow-up surgeries since the accident that I've largely been covering myself.

I guess my questions are:

  • Is this how criminal restitution almost always goes?
  • Is there anything separate I can still do on the civil side?
  • Has anyone else been in this limbo where there's a conviction but you're still financially drowning?

I'm not looking for pity — I just feel like the system checked a box and moved on while I'm still dealing with the fallout every single day.

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9 replies

  • 6
    bright-marten-631

    Unfortunately yes, this is how restitution often goes and it's infuriating. My situation was different — no criminal case — but I talked to people at my rehab facility who had restitution orders and almost all of them said the same thing you're describing. The court issues the order and then basically shrugs. The burden of actually chasing the money falls back on you. I'm sorry you're going through this.

    • 4
      keen-stoat-877

      Criminal restitution and a civil judgment are actually two separate things, and a lot of people don't realize you can pursue both. The criminal restitution order doesn't prevent you from filing (or having already filed) a civil personal injury claim. The civil side gives you more tools to actually collect — wage garnishment, liens on property, that kind of thing. If you haven't already talked to a PI attorney about the civil angle, that conversation is worth having, especially if the defendant has any assets. The statute of limitations clock matters here so don't wait too long to ask.

    • 9
      candid-lynx-696

      The financial stress on top of recovering from serious injuries is genuinely its own health problem — I see it all the time. People plateau in recovery partly because the stress response just won't shut off when you're worried about money and bills constantly. Please make sure whoever is treating you knows the full picture of what's going on, not just the physical symptoms. It matters for your care plan.

  • 3
    humble-kestrel-112

    Also worth asking: did the at-fault driver have auto insurance at the time? Even if it was a hit-and-run situation initially, once he was identified his insurer potentially comes back into the picture. Adjusters will absolutely let you assume you're stuck chasing restitution if it means their company pays nothing. Don't assume anything was fully resolved on the insurance side just because there was a conviction.

    • 9
      humble-sparrow-135

      Jumping off what the person above said — when there's a criminal conviction involved, some carriers will try to drag their feet hoping claimants get tired and go away. I watched it happen. The conviction actually helps you on the civil side because liability is basically already established. If you have uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage on your own policy, that might be another avenue that hasn't been fully explored yet.

  • 11
    calm-hare-127

    Not legal advice, but the situation you're describing — a conviction, a restitution order, minimal collection, ongoing medical costs — is exactly the kind of thing a personal injury attorney can evaluate for free. The civil and criminal tracks really do run independently. The fact that he tried to cover up the damage could also be relevant to a civil case. Worth a consultation at minimum.

  • 10
    clever-heron-026

    Two things: First, document every single out-of-pocket expense you have paid since the accident — every copay, every prescription, every mile to a doctor. If civil action is still possible you want that ready. Second, call your state's crime victim compensation program if you haven't already. Most states have a fund specifically for situations where restitution goes uncollected and victims are left holding the bag. It won't cover everything but it might cover more than you think.

  • 12
    clever-otter-912

    Quick question — did you have your own attorney during the criminal case, or just the prosecutor representing the state? Because there's a big difference. The DA is technically not your lawyer, they're the state's lawyer. A lot of victims don't realize their interests and the state's interests aren't always the same thing. Curious whether you had independent representation helping you pursue the civil side simultaneously.

  • 5
    mellow-badger-622

    I just want to say I'm really sorry. Reading this made me genuinely angry on your behalf. You did everything right — cooperated, waited for the process to work — and you're still the one struggling four years later while this guy presumably just goes on with his life. That's not okay. I hope you find a path that actually gets you what you're owed.