Pale Rider
Legendary Member
The OP's young age - 15 years I believe - may help in terms of police motivation.
I had an incident with a car driver, when I had a motorbike. Driver jumped a red and drove at me, I came off taking evasive action and did well over £500 of damage to the bike as it slid down the road. No CCTV everywhere then, but I did have a reliable witness (Off duty policeman) behind me who saw the whole thing. I still had to fork out to fix the bike as no contact actually made.Unfortunately a difficult one, and a surprisingly common event with motorcycles.
Car driver does something stupid, the rider crashes taking evasive action. Insurer says "Prove it was the driver", with no collision, unless you have vidoe, or very good witnesses, it's unfortunately going nowhere.
I had an incident with a car driver, when I had a motorbike. Driver jumped a red and drove at me, I came off taking evasive action and did well over £500 of damage to the bike as it slid down the road. No CCTV everywhere then, but I did have a reliable witness (Off duty policeman) behind me who saw the whole thing. I still had to fork out to fix the bike as no contact actually made.
Is this insurance pool likely to pay out in a situation when if the driver were found, the insurance company would be unlikely to pay out?There is an insurance pool to cover damages and costs for incidents like this when the driver can't be found. You should contact the CAB or a solicitor about claiming for damage to clothes, bike, injury compensation if you feel it would be worth it.
There is an insurance pool to cover damages and costs for incidents like this when the driver can't be found. You should contact the CAB or a solicitor about claiming for damage to clothes, bike, injury compensation if you feel it would be worth it.
It's the "caused the accident" bit. After Emsworth, approx 20 witnesses, the insurance company said that although the van had passed the group closely while beeping loudly there had been no contact and therefore the van driver hadn't caused the accident.You need to be able to identify a driver or a vehicle.
From the MIB website
"If you cannot identify the driver, try to identify the vehicle involved through any registration number you have been given. To make a claim for property damage you must be able to identify the vehicle that caused the accident."
You need to be able to identify a driver or a vehicle.
From the MIB website
"If you cannot identify the driver, try to identify the vehicle involved through any registration number you have been given. To make a claim for property damage you must be able to identify the vehicle that caused the accident."