Originally Posted by birdgirl73
They'll share the footage. They're required to. It's public information since they're public servants supported by your tax dollars and since this case involves you. Now they may not just hand you a video cassette and let you go watch it. The police departments that I've known best (by virtue of my paramedic years) always invited interested parties in to review the videotapes with them. If they give you the least bit of resistance about requesting or viewing the videotape, you can file under the Open Records Act. If it's a small-town department, you or your attorney might well have to threaten that.
OK, one thing at a time. 1. The police questioned the victim first. That's standard operating procedure. They always question victims first, whether it's motor vehicle accidents or domestic violence or criminal investigations. They can tell who's the victim in car accidents because they've had lots of traffic and accident-evaluation training and because they've seen the same accident probably about 1,999 times before.
"But he ran the red light and clipped me!" That may or may not be true. Most standard four-way intersection light sequences end the left-turn green in the opposing direction and then have at least a three- to seven-second delay before the light governing the opposing straight-ahead traffic turns yellow, then red. So the guy that clipped you might have still had the right of way on a green, or even yellow, light. Just because your left-turn lane had gone to red doesn't necessarily mean the opposing through-traffic (straight) lanes had a red, too. Witnesses or intersection indicator lights can verify whether he ran a red. If that's a busy intersection, it may have traffic cameras. Nonetheless, there's no doubt that you're the one who failed to yield. Which was why he questioned that other guy, the victim, first. 3. And why you got a citation.
2. The fact that they failed to ask your side of the story or ask you if you needed medical attention is a little strange. But it's not unheard of. I'm guessing it wasn't all that bad a wreck because witnesses on cell phones would have had ambulances there long before the police arrived if there'd been a question of injuries. The police are all trained first-responders themselves and can tell when people are hurt.
4. They wouldn't talk to you with your phone out of your pocket like that because they didn't know if you were taking pictures or videotaping them or had a lawyer listening on the other end of the phone. That's probably their standard approach. Even if it isn't, you were standing out there yelling while he had the ability drive off. You always get a lot further with police if you don't yell at them.
I knew when I read the line "I'm going to go to court to fight this injustice" that you must be fairly young. Only a youthful idealist would even attempt it. No matter what you do, you'll be at a disadvantage. You did fail to yield, and for an effective fight you will need an attorney to represent you, which is going to cost WAY more than it would to simply pay the citation fine, pay your deductible for the repairs, and move on. Sorry to have to tell it to you straight like that, but justice in this case is likely to disappoint you (or make you or your parents much poorer first, then disappoint you). Just pay the fine and don't pull out into intersections like that any more. Had that other car t-boned you instead of just clipping you, you might not have lived to tell this story. Glad you're OK!!