If you’re reading this article, you were likely injured in a serious car or truck accident in Virginia.
You are taking the right steps by trying to get a copy of the Traffic Crash Report, which is completed by the police officer or state trooper who responds to your accident scene. The police report provides important facts and information about your motor vehicle accident that will help you prove that the other driver’s negligence caused your injuries and alert you to possible defenses to your negligence claim, such as contributory negligence.
The purpose of this article is to explain how you can get a copy of the Car Accident Police Report in Virginia and how to use it to investigate and build your personal injury case. Conducting an investigation soon after your automobile crash is often the difference between receiving a fair car accident settlement offer and walking away with little or no money.
If you have any questions after reading this article, call me for a free consultation: (804) 251-1620 or (757) 810-5614. Come see why I’ve been voted one of the best car accident lawyers in Virginia and what type of personal injury settlement I can get for you.
The purpose of the police crash investigation and report is to determine and document what caused the motor vehicle crash.
National, state, and local agencies such as the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV), the Virginia State Police (VSP), and the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) use information from crash reports to create programs and make changes that improve highway safety.
For example, Virginia Code Section 46.2-373(C) states that the Commissioner of Highways can use accident reports to exercise the power to reduce speed limits where accident frequency or severity suggests that will help.
Yes – in most cases.
The motor vehicle laws of Virginia require law enforcement officers to submit a police crash report to the DMV for all reportable crashes.
Virginia Code Section 46.2-373(A) clarifies when a crash is “reportable.” The investigating law enforcement officer must complete and submit a police report when the motor vehicle accident occurs on public property and results in injury to or death of any person or total property damage to an apparent extent of $1,500.00 or more. A police report should be available in almost every car accident that results in a civil action under tort law or a claim under workers compensation laws.
An automobile crash occurs on public property if it happens on a highway, road, street, or public parking lot maintained by state, county, or municipal funds.
Virginia Code Section 46.2-273 requires law enforcement officers to submit a crash report to the DMV within 24 hours of completion of the accident investigation.
You should be able to get a copy of the police report within one week of the crash.
Law enforcement officers are trained to investigate an auto accident and to complete the standard Police Crash Report (FR300P).
The Police Crash Report, revised in 2012, is a six-page form. The first four pages of the form are used for crashes involving cars, pickup trucks, and SUVs. The first five pages are used for a Commercial Motor Vehicle (CMV) crash, such as one involving a tractor-trailer. And pages one through four and six are used for pedestrian crashes or crashes involving more than three passengers in any vehicle.
The Police Crash Report has several different sections allowing the investigating officer to enter the following information:
The police report will include the:
You can use this information to prove that you were involved in an auto collision and to decide where to file a civil action if your claim doesn’t settle.
The police report will include the name of the investigating officer, their badge number, the agency or police department the officer works for, and the date the Police Crash Report was filed.
This information is important because you may want to call the investigating officer as a witness at trial.
For each driver involved in the crash, the police report will include:
For each vehicle involved in the crash, the police report will state:
For every passenger injured or killed in the motor vehicle crash, the police report will provide the same information it does for vehicle drivers.
For each driver, the police report will state:
The police report will include:
The police report will include:
This information can help you identify potential defendants other than the driver of the vehicle that caused your crash.
The investigating officer may take pictures of the crash scene and vehicle damage.
The standard Police Crash Report form includes a space where the officer can diagram how the accident happened and what parts of the vehicles were damaged.
The Police Crash Report may include contact information for persons who witnessed the accident.
I recommend contacting all witnesses and obtaining sworn written statements if a witness will help you prove that the other driver caused the wreck.
Sometimes.
The police report may state who was at fault for the car accident based on the police officer’s investigation and professional judgment. But the officer may not draw a conclusion and many police reports do not determine who is at fault.
Even if no fault determination is made, the police report will state whether the officer issued a traffic citation as part of the crash investigation.
A traffic citation, also called a traffic ticket, is a notice issued by a law enforcement officer that accuses a driver of violating a traffic law. Though a traffic citation will not prove that the other driver is responsible for the crash and liable for your injuries automatically, it will help you win your case or negotiate a fair settlement.
Sometimes. But police accident reports are often inaccurate or incomplete.
There are several reasons why an accident report may include wrong information:
The bottom line is the police accident report is just one piece of evidence in your case. It can make things easier but should not be the only evidence you rely on to prove liability and damages.
And for those of you who are worried that an unfavorable report will destroy your claim, remember that motor vehicle collision cases are tried in court not on the road with the officer acting as the investigator, judge, and jury.
No.
The police will not send the accident report to your insurance company automatically. Your insurer will become aware of your accident only if and when you or any of the drivers or passengers involved in the crash file a claim.
If you want your insurer or the defendant driver’s insurer to have a copy of the crash report sooner, you can obtain a copy and send it to the insurer directly. This can speed up the claims process.
In Virginia, the DMV will release a copy of the motor vehicle accident report to:
If you want a copy of the police report but were not involved in the crash and do not represent a person or insurance company involved in the crash, you cannot get a copy of the police report from the DMV. But you can get the following information under Virginia Code Section 46.2-379:
To get a copy of the accident report in Virginia, you must submit either a written request or a completed Information Request Form (CRD 93), along with your payment, to the DMV.
Your written request must include:
You may submit your request for the accident report by mail or fax, or in person at a DMV Customer Service Center.
If requesting by mail, send your request to:
Customer Records Work Center, Room 514
Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles
Post Office Box 27412
Richmond, VA 23269
If requesting by fax, send your request to (804) 367-0390.
You can also get a copy of the Traffic Crash Report from the Police Department that responded to and investigated your auto collision.
I recommend visiting the website of that Police Department to see how to get a copy by mail or in person.
You will have to pay $8.00 for each police accident report you request.
The DMV will keep a copy of the Police Crash Report for at least 36 months after the date it receives the report.
No.
Usually, the police report is inadmissible under a state statute or evidentiary rule. This means that neither you nor the defendant driver is allowed to introduce the police report into evidence at trial or to show it to the jury to help your case.
In Virginia, police reports are inadmissible under both Code Section 46.2-379 and 2:802 of the Rules of Evidence.
Code Section 46.2-379, titled Use of Crash Reports Made by Investigating Officers, states:
All crash reports made by investigating officers shall be for the confidential use of the Department [of Motor Vehicles] and of other state agencies for accident prevention purposes and shall not be used as evidence in any trial, civil or criminal, arising out of any accident.
The Supreme Court of Virginia has stated: “The rationale of the statute is that the report, although routinely and sometimes hurriedly made, primarily for statistical purposes, nevertheless carries with it the stamp of a written and official document to which a jury could attach more weight than it is properly due.”
Virginia Rule of Evidence 2:802 states: “Hearsay is not admissible except as provided by these Rules, other Rules of the Supreme Court of Virginia, or by Virginia statutes or case law.”
The Supreme Court of Virginia defines hearsay as “testimony given by a witness who relates, not what he knows personally, but what others have told him, or what he has heard said by others.” This includes both oral statements and written testimony.
An accident report is hearsay because the police officer has no independent knowledge of the crash and depends on the statements of the involved drivers and passengers and eyewitnesses to complete the report. Therefore it is inadmissible in Virginia.
You may be wondering why the police accident report is helpful or important if it is inadmissible at trial. Fortunately, it has several other uses.
If you are hurt in a work-related auto accident, a law enforcement officer will likely respond to the crash scene and complete an accident report.
The police accident report can help you recover workers compensation benefits, including lifetime medical, temporary total disability, permanent partial disability, and a lump sum settlement. But it usually has a less important role in workers comp claims.
That is because you do not need to prove the other driver’s negligence caused your accident and injuries to receive workers compensation payments.
Instead, you can use the accident report to prove that you were involved in a crash, if that is disputed, and that you were not driving recklessly, which prevents your employer’s workers compensation insurance carrier or third party claim administrator (TPA) from alleging that your willful misconduct or violation of a safety rule caused your injuries.
If you or a loved one was injured in a motor vehicle collision in Virginia, email or call me at (804) 251-1620 or (757) 810-5614 to schedule a free case evaluation. As your personal injury lawyer, I’ll help you get every dollar possible.