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Dashcams and Crash Claims: The $100 Witness That Never Forgets
In fault disputes it’s your word against theirs — unless a camera was running. Dashcam threads in driving and insurance forums read like a highlight reel of claims saved.
Plain-English answers to the questions crash victims actually ask.
Where footage decides claims
He-said-she-said fault disputes: lane-change sideswipes, intersection right-of-way, the rear-end where they claim you brake-checked.
Contributory negligence states (North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Alabama, D.C.): where 1% fault can bar recovery entirely, objective footage is worth more than anywhere else in the country.
Hit-and-runs: a readable plate converts an uninsured motorist claim into a liability claim against an identified driver.
Staged accidents: swoop-and-stop fraud collapses on video.
After a crash, protect the file
Stop the camera before it loop-records over the clip; pull the card or save the event file.
Back it up twice before handing anything to anyone.
Share with police at the scene if it helps the report.
Think before volunteering footage to insurers — it cuts both ways. If fault is contested or injuries are serious, let an attorney decide what goes out and when.
Worth it?
A reliable dual-channel camera costs less than one insurance deductible. Against a fault dispute that could swing an entire injury claim, it's the cheapest evidence money buys.