Even without an official police report, you can still protect your rights and pursue compensation by documenting the scene thoroughly and gathering witness information immediately after the accident. Most insurance companies and courts accept alternative forms of evidence when a police report is unavailable or wasn’t filed at the scene.
Handling a car accident without police involvement requires you to take on documentation responsibilities that officers would normally handle, but thousands of minor accident victims successfully resolve their claims each year using photographs, witness statements, and medical records as their primary evidence. Whether the other driver left the scene, the accident seemed too minor to warrant police attention, or officers simply didn’t respond, you still have legal options for recovering damages if you act quickly and document everything carefully.
Why Police Reports Matter in Accident Claims
Police reports serve as neutral third-party documentation of what happened at an accident scene. Insurance adjusters and courts view these reports as credible because officers have no financial stake in the outcome and are trained to assess accident scenes objectively.
When an officer documents the scene, they typically record vehicle positions, road conditions, witness statements, and their professional assessment of fault. Under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-273, Georgia drivers are required to report accidents involving injury, death, or property damage exceeding $500 to law enforcement, but many accidents still go unreported for various reasons.
Common Reasons Accidents Lack Police Reports
Many legitimate accidents occur without official police documentation. The other driver may have convinced you the damage was too minor to involve police, or they may have fled the scene before officers could arrive.
In rural areas or during high-call-volume periods, police departments sometimes cannot dispatch officers to minor property-damage-only accidents. Some drivers involved in fender benders exchange information and leave without realizing they should have called police, only later discovering hidden damage or delayed injury symptoms.
Immediate Steps at the Accident Scene
Taking the right actions immediately after an accident can make or break your ability to recover compensation later. Every minute counts when preserving evidence without official law enforcement documentation.
Document the Scene with Photos and Video
Take photos from multiple angles showing vehicle damage, debris patterns, skid marks, traffic signs, and the overall intersection or road layout. Capture close-up shots of specific damage points as well as wide shots showing the relationship between vehicles.
Record a brief video walking around the scene while narrating what you see. Modern smartphone timestamps provide valuable evidence of when documentation occurred, and video captures details that photos might miss.
Collect the Other Driver’s Information
Write down the other driver’s full name, phone number, address, driver’s license number, and license plate number. Request their insurance company name and policy number directly from their insurance card if they have it available.
If the driver refuses to provide information or cannot produce a valid license or insurance, note their physical description and vehicle details. Georgia law under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-273 requires drivers to exchange this information, but some drivers still refuse or provide false details.
Gather Witness Contact Information
Approach anyone who saw the accident and ask if they would be willing to provide a statement. Record their full names, phone numbers, and email addresses while memories are fresh.
Ask witnesses to describe briefly what they saw, and if they’re willing, record a short video statement on your phone. Independent witness testimony often proves decisive when determining fault without a police report.
Write Down Your Own Account
While details are fresh, write or type a detailed narrative of what happened including the time, weather conditions, traffic signals, speeds, and actions each driver took. Note any statements the other driver made, especially if they admitted fault or apologized.
This contemporaneous account will be far more credible than something you try to reconstruct weeks later. Include details about how you felt physically right after impact, even if you didn’t notice injuries immediately.
Check for Security or Traffic Cameras
Look around for nearby businesses, homes, or traffic cameras that might have recorded the accident. Note their locations and try to contact property owners or business managers immediately to request footage before it’s automatically deleted.
Many surveillance systems overwrite footage after 24-72 hours, so speed matters. If a business refuses to preserve footage, your attorney can later subpoena it, but only if the footage still exists.
Seek Medical Attention Immediately
Visit an emergency room, urgent care facility, or your primary doctor the same day as the accident, even if you feel fine. Some serious injuries like soft tissue damage, concussions, or internal injuries have delayed symptoms.
Medical records created within hours of an accident carry far more weight than records created days or weeks later. Insurance companies often argue that delayed treatment means injuries weren’t serious or weren’t caused by the accident.
Creating Your Own Accident Documentation
When police don’t respond, you become the primary documenter of the accident. The quality and completeness of your self-created documentation directly determines whether your insurance claim succeeds.
Complete a Written Statement
Type a detailed statement including the date, time, and exact location of the accident with cross streets or mile markers. Describe weather and road conditions, traffic volume, and visibility.
Explain your route, speed, and actions in the moments before impact. Detail what the other vehicle did, including their speed, lane position, and any traffic violations you observed. Describe the collision itself including which parts of the vehicles made contact and the force of impact.
Create a Diagram of the Accident Scene
Draw an overhead view showing the road layout, lane markings, traffic signals, stop signs, and the position of both vehicles before and after impact. Use arrows to indicate the direction each vehicle was traveling.
Include landmarks like buildings, intersections, or parking lots to establish context. This visual representation helps insurance adjusters and potentially jurors understand your description of events.
Document All Vehicle Damage
Photograph every dent, scratch, and broken part from multiple angles in good lighting. Take photos immediately after the accident and again in daylight if the accident occurred at night.
Request written repair estimates from at least two reputable body shops. These estimates serve as evidence of damage severity and repair costs when no official damage assessment exists.
Preserve Physical Evidence
Keep damaged parts, torn clothing, or other physical evidence from the accident. If your airbag deployed, don’t allow it to be removed until after an insurance adjuster examines it.
Store everything in a safe place where it won’t be further damaged or lost. Physical evidence often proves more compelling than descriptions alone.
Reporting the Accident to Insurance Companies
Contact your insurance company within 24 hours of the accident, regardless of whether you have a police report. Most policies require prompt notification, and delays can give insurers grounds to deny coverage.
Provide factual information about what happened without speculating about fault or minimizing your injuries. Mention that you documented the scene thoroughly and have photos, witness information, and other evidence available.
Reporting to Your Own Insurance Company
Call your insurer’s claims department and provide basic accident details including date, time, location, and the other driver’s information. Explain honestly why no police report exists, whether because officers didn’t respond, the accident seemed minor at the time, or another reason.
Your own insurance company will open a claim file even without a police report. If you carry collision coverage, your insurer may pay for your vehicle repairs regardless of fault, then pursue reimbursement from the other driver’s insurance company through subrogation.
Reporting to the Other Driver’s Insurance Company
Contact the at-fault driver’s insurance company only after speaking with your own insurer or an attorney. Provide only basic factual information and do not agree to give a recorded statement without legal advice.
The other driver’s insurer will likely request your documentation, photos, and witness information. Be cooperative but cautious, as adjusters are trained to find reasons to minimize or deny claims, especially those without police reports.
Handling Insurance Company Requests
Adjusters will ask for copies of your photos, medical records, repair estimates, and written statements. Provide documentation promptly but keep copies of everything you send.
If an adjuster requests a recorded statement, politely decline or consult an attorney first. Recorded statements can be used against you later, especially when you’re describing events without a police report to corroborate your account.
Obtaining Alternative Official Documentation
Even without an initial police report, you can still create official records that support your claim. Several types of alternative documentation carry significant weight with insurance companies.
Filing a Self-Report with Law Enforcement
Georgia law under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-276 allows drivers to file accident reports directly with the Department of Driver Services within 30 days if the accident caused injury, death, or property damage exceeding $500. This report becomes part of the official record even though it’s self-reported.
Visit the Georgia Department of Driver Services website or local office to obtain the proper accident report form. Complete it accurately with all the information you gathered at the scene. While less authoritative than an officer’s report, this documentation proves you took the accident seriously and reported it through official channels.
Requesting a Delayed Police Report
Some police departments will accept delayed accident reports if you visit the station within a few days. Contact the department with jurisdiction over the accident location and ask about their policy for after-the-fact reporting.
Bring all your documentation including photos, witness information, and insurance details. While the officer won’t investigate the scene or determine fault without physical evidence to examine, the report will officially document that the accident occurred and was reported to law enforcement.
Obtaining Traffic Camera Footage
If traffic cameras were present at the accident location, request footage from the agency that operates them, typically the Department of Transportation or local traffic management department. Submit a formal written request as soon as possible since footage is usually retained for only 30-90 days.
Public records laws generally allow you to access this footage, though you may need to pay a processing fee. If your initial request is denied, an attorney can submit a more formal demand or subpoena if a lawsuit becomes necessary.
Securing Medical Records
Request complete copies of all medical records, emergency room reports, diagnostic imaging, and billing statements from every healthcare provider you’ve seen since the accident. These records establish a clear timeline of injuries and treatment.
Medical documentation becomes especially important without a police report because it provides objective third-party evidence that you were injured and sought treatment. Consistent medical records showing ongoing treatment for accident-related injuries are difficult for insurance companies to dispute.
How the Absence of a Police Report Affects Your Claim
Without an official police report, insurance companies will scrutinize your claim more carefully and may initially offer lower settlements. Adjusters know that cases without police reports are more difficult to prove in court, which sometimes makes them less willing to negotiate fairly.
Your burden of proof increases substantially because you must independently establish what happened, who was at fault, and the extent of damages. Strong alternative documentation can overcome this obstacle, but expect the claims process to take longer and require more back-and-forth communication.
Impact on Fault Determination
Police reports often include an officer’s opinion about which driver violated traffic laws or caused the accident. Without this professional assessment, insurance companies rely entirely on your documentation, witness statements, and physical evidence to determine liability.
If the other driver provides their insurer with a different version of events, you may face a “he said, she said” dispute. Thorough documentation, especially photos showing vehicle positions and damage patterns, helps reconstruct the accident and establish fault through physical evidence rather than competing narratives.
Effect on Settlement Negotiations
Insurance adjusters frequently offer lower initial settlements for claims without police reports, betting that claimants will accept less rather than pursue more aggressive legal action. They know that cases without official reports are harder to prove and may be less likely to succeed at trial.
Strong witness testimony and comprehensive documentation can overcome this disadvantage. Some claims without police reports still settle for full value when evidence clearly establishes fault and damages, but be prepared for more negotiation resistance than you would face with an official report.
Challenges in Proving Damages
Without an officer documenting visible injuries or vehicle damage at the scene, insurance companies may argue that damage occurred separately from the accident or that injuries aren’t as severe as claimed. Immediate medical records and same-day damage photos counter these arguments.
The timing of your documentation matters enormously. Photos taken hours or days later allow insurers to claim additional damage occurred after the accident, while delayed medical treatment lets them argue injuries resulted from something other than the collision.
When to Consult an Attorney
Consider speaking with a personal injury attorney before accepting any settlement offer for a claim without a police report. Most attorneys offer free consultations where they’ll review your documentation and advise whether your evidence is strong enough to pursue full compensation.
An attorney becomes especially important if you suffered significant injuries, face disputed liability, or receive a settlement offer that seems too low. Lawyers experienced in handling claims without police reports know how to gather and present alternative evidence effectively.
Signs You Need Legal Representation
If the insurance company denies your claim outright, disputes that you were injured, or offers a settlement covering only a fraction of your medical bills and lost wages, you likely need an attorney. Cases involving permanent injuries, surgeries, or disabilities justify legal representation even when initial settlement offers seem reasonable.
When the other driver disputes fault or provides their insurer with a contradictory account of the accident, an attorney can investigate further, interview witnesses more formally, and prepare your case for potential litigation. Insurance companies take claims more seriously once an attorney is involved.
What Attorneys Can Do Without a Police Report
Experienced personal injury lawyers know how to build strong cases using alternative evidence sources. They can hire accident reconstruction experts who analyze photos, vehicle damage, and road conditions to create professional reports explaining how the accident occurred and who was at fault.
Attorneys can also subpoena surveillance footage, phone records showing the other driver was texting, or other evidence that proves negligence. They handle all communication with insurance adjusters, preventing you from making statements that could harm your claim. Under Georgia law, attorneys can file lawsuits before the two-year statute of limitations under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33 expires, giving you leverage to negotiate better settlements.
Preventing Future Issues Without Police Reports
Understanding when police reports are required versus optional helps you make better decisions after future accidents. The rules vary by state and by accident severity.
Georgia’s Accident Reporting Requirements
Georgia law under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-273 requires drivers to immediately report accidents involving injury, death, or property damage exceeding $500 to the nearest law enforcement agency. Failure to report qualifying accidents can result in fines and license suspension.
Minor fender benders with damage clearly under $500 and no injuries technically don’t require police reports, but estimating damage accurately at the scene is difficult. Most insurance professionals recommend calling police for any accident where vehicles sustained noticeable damage, even if it seems minor, because hidden damage often costs more than $500 to repair.
Best Practices for Any Accident
Always call 911 after any accident involving injuries, suspected injuries, or significant property damage. Even if you feel fine immediately after the accident, adrenaline can mask injury symptoms that emerge hours later.
Never leave an accident scene before exchanging information with the other driver, even for minor accidents. Take photos and collect witness information regardless of whether police are coming, because this evidence protects you if the other driver later lies about what happened or if hidden injuries or damage emerge later.
Using Technology to Document Accidents
Modern smartphones provide powerful documentation tools that weren’t available to accident victims even a decade ago. Use these technologies strategically to create the strongest possible record of what happened.
Your phone’s camera can capture high-resolution photos with embedded timestamps and GPS coordinates proving exactly when and where images were taken. Take at least 20-30 photos from various angles showing the overall scene, vehicle positions, specific damage, road conditions, weather, and nearby landmarks.
Video documentation provides even richer context than photos alone. Walk around the scene while recording a video narrating what you see, explaining traffic patterns, and pointing out relevant details like traffic signals, intersection design, or visibility obstructions. Many insurance adjusters find video more persuasive than photos because it captures more information in a format that’s harder to misinterpret.
Voice memo apps let you record your immediate recollection of events while details are fresh. Record a detailed narrative within minutes of the accident if possible, describing everything you remember about the moments before, during, and after the collision. This contemporaneous account created at the scene carries more weight than written statements created days later.
Common Mistakes to Avoid Without a Police Report
Several critical errors can destroy your ability to recover compensation when no police report documents the accident. Awareness of these pitfalls helps you protect your rights even without official law enforcement involvement.
Never admit fault at the accident scene, even if you believe you may have contributed to the accident. Insurance companies will use any admission against you, and your immediate assessment of fault may be wrong once all facts are known. Georgia follows a modified comparative negligence rule under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33, where you can still recover damages even if you were partially at fault, as long as you were less than 50% responsible.
Do not agree to settle the accident privately without involving insurance companies. The other driver may promise to pay for damages directly to avoid an insurance rate increase, but they rarely follow through once they see actual repair costs. Once you agree to handle the accident privately, you’ve eliminated your insurance coverage and have limited recourse if the other party doesn’t pay.
Avoid posting about the accident on social media. Insurance companies routinely search claimants’ social media profiles for evidence contradicting injury claims. A single photo of you looking happy or engaging in physical activity can be misrepresented to suggest your injuries aren’t serious.
How Witness Statements Strengthen Claims Without Police Reports
Independent witness testimony becomes extraordinarily valuable when no police report corroborates your version of events. Witnesses provide neutral third-party accounts that insurance companies must take seriously.
Approach witnesses at the accident scene before they leave. People willing to stop after witnessing an accident are usually willing to provide contact information and brief statements. Ask open-ended questions about what they saw rather than leading questions suggesting what you want them to say.
Request that witnesses write down what they observed in their own words, then sign and date their statements. Handwritten witness statements created at the scene carry more weight than statements drafted days later, especially since they’re less likely to be influenced by what the witness learned after the accident.
If witnesses prefer not to write statements at the scene, at minimum get their full names and phone numbers. Your attorney or insurance adjuster can contact them later for formal statements. However, witness memories fade quickly, and people who seemed willing to help at the scene sometimes become reluctant once days pass and they decide they don’t want to get involved.
Dealing With Hit-and-Run Accidents
Hit-and-run accidents create unique challenges since you have no opportunity to exchange information with the at-fault driver. Without a police report, recovering compensation becomes even more difficult, but options still exist.
Call police immediately after any hit-and-run accident, even if damage seems minor. Officers are more likely to respond to hit-and-runs than to regular fender benders, and filing a police report is essential for potential uninsured motorist claims. Under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-270, leaving an accident scene is a criminal offense, and police take these reports seriously.
Document everything you can about the vehicle that struck you including make, model, color, license plate number (even partial numbers help), visible damage, and direction of travel. Note anything distinctive about the driver if you saw them, such as gender, approximate age, or distinguishing features.
Your uninsured motorist coverage may pay for your damages if the hit-and-run driver is never identified. Under Georgia law, uninsured motorist coverage typically includes hit-and-run accidents, but insurers require you to file a police report and may demand proof that you attempted to identify the other driver before paying claims.
Understanding Your Insurance Policy Without Police Reports
Insurance policies contain specific provisions about reporting accidents and filing claims. Understanding these requirements protects your coverage even when police reports aren’t available.
Most auto insurance policies require you to notify your insurer “promptly” or “immediately” after an accident, typically defined as within 24-72 hours. This notification requirement exists regardless of whether a police report was filed, and failure to report promptly can give insurers grounds to deny coverage.
Your policy may include both collision coverage and uninsured motorist coverage. Collision coverage pays for your vehicle repairs regardless of fault, while uninsured motorist coverage protects you when the at-fault driver lacks insurance or cannot be identified. Both coverage types remain available even without police reports, though your insurer will still investigate the claim.
Read your policy’s claim filing procedures carefully. Some policies require written notice within specific timeframes, while others accept initial verbal notice followed by written documentation. Understanding these requirements prevents unintentional policy violations that could jeopardize coverage.
The Role of Medical Documentation in No-Report Claims
When police reports don’t document accident injuries, medical records become your primary proof that injuries occurred and were caused by the collision. The strength and consistency of your medical documentation often determines whether your injury claim succeeds.
Seek treatment immediately after the accident, ideally within hours of the collision. Emergency room records created the same day as the accident establish a clear causal connection between the collision and your injuries that becomes harder to prove with each passing day.
Tell every healthcare provider you visit that your injuries resulted from a motor vehicle accident. This information gets documented in your medical records and establishes that you consistently attributed your injuries to the accident from the beginning. Failure to mention the accident to doctors allows insurance companies to argue that injuries resulted from something else.
Follow all treatment recommendations your doctors make. Gaps in treatment or missed appointments give insurance adjusters ammunition to argue that your injuries aren’t serious or have healed. Consistent treatment following medical advice creates a documented pattern of ongoing injury that supports your damage claims.
FAQs About Handling Car Accidents Without Police Reports
Can I still file an insurance claim without a police report?
Yes, you can absolutely file an insurance claim without a police report, and insurance companies are legally required to investigate claims based on the evidence you provide. Your photos, witness statements, medical records, and written account of the accident serve as alternative documentation that insurers must consider when evaluating your claim. While adjusters may initially be more skeptical of claims without official reports, strong alternative evidence often leads to full settlements, especially when liability is clear from photos and witness testimony. The key is documenting everything thoroughly at the scene and reporting the accident to your insurance company within the timeframe specified in your policy, typically within 24-72 hours.
Most auto insurance policies do not specifically require police reports to process claims, only that you provide reasonable proof that an accident occurred and evidence supporting your damage claims. Courts have consistently held that insurance companies cannot deny claims solely because no police report exists, as long as policyholders provide sufficient alternative evidence of the accident and resulting damages. If your insurer denies a claim citing only the lack of a police report without investigating your other evidence, consult an attorney, as this may constitute bad faith claim handling under Georgia law.
How long do I have to file a police report after an accident in Georgia?
Under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-276, Georgia drivers involved in accidents resulting in injury, death, or property damage exceeding $500 must file a written report with the Department of Driver Services within 30 days of the accident. This requirement exists even if police officers responded to the scene and created their own report, making it a separate legal obligation from calling 911 at the accident scene. You can obtain the proper accident report form from the Georgia Department of Driver Services website or any DDS office, and completing this self-report creates an official record that the accident occurred and was properly reported.
While the 30-day window gives you time to gather information and complete the report accurately, filing sooner is better because prompt reporting demonstrates good faith and preserves evidence while memories are fresh. Some insurance policies also require notification within much shorter timeframes, often 24-72 hours, so don’t wait the full 30 days to begin your claims process even though the legal reporting deadline is longer. If you’re unsure whether your accident meets the $500 damage threshold, err on the side of caution and file a report anyway, since repair costs often exceed initial estimates once hidden damage is discovered.
What happens if the other driver lies about the accident?
When the other driver provides their insurance company with a false account of the accident, your comprehensive documentation becomes your strongest defense against their lies. Insurance adjusters investigate competing claims by examining physical evidence like vehicle damage patterns, debris fields, and road conditions visible in photos, which often reveal whose account is accurate regardless of what each driver claims. Damage patterns don’t lie—if the other driver claims they were rear-ended but photos show front-end damage on their vehicle, physical evidence contradicts their story.
Independent witness statements prove especially valuable when drivers provide conflicting accounts. Witnesses have no financial stake in the outcome, making their testimony highly credible to both insurance adjusters and courts. If witnesses corroborate your version of events, the other driver’s lies become obvious, and their credibility is destroyed. Strong photographic evidence showing vehicle positions, final resting places, skid marks, and the overall accident scene allows accident reconstruction experts to determine scientifically what happened, regardless of what either driver claims. If the other driver’s lies prevent fair settlement, an attorney can gather additional evidence through legal discovery, including phone records showing they were texting at the time of the accident or surveillance footage proving their account is impossible.
Does the lack of a police report affect my injury claim?
The absence of a police report makes injury claims more challenging but definitely does not prevent you from recovering compensation if you have strong medical documentation and other evidence supporting your claim. Insurance companies will scrutinize your injuries more carefully without an official report, but they cannot deny legitimate injury claims solely because no police report exists. Immediate medical records created within hours of the accident, consistent treatment following doctor recommendations, and clear medical documentation connecting your injuries to the accident provide the proof you need even without police documentation.
The timing of your medical treatment becomes even more critical without a police report because insurance adjusters will argue that delayed treatment means your injuries weren’t caused by the accident or aren’t serious. Visiting an emergency room or doctor the same day as the accident creates a medical record with timestamps proving you sought treatment immediately, which strongly suggests your injuries resulted from the collision. If you wait several days to see a doctor, expect insurance companies to claim your injuries resulted from something that happened during the gap between the accident and treatment, making your claim much harder to prove and reducing potential settlement amounts significantly.
Can I get compensation if I didn’t call the police at the time?
Yes, you can still receive full compensation for your damages even if you didn’t call police at the time of the accident, provided you documented the scene thoroughly and can prove the other driver was at fault. Many successful insurance claims and personal injury lawsuits proceed without police reports when claimants present strong alternative evidence including photos, witness statements, and medical records. The key is taking immediate action to preserve evidence and document everything while you’re still at the scene, because opportunities to gather evidence disappear quickly once everyone leaves.
Your failure to call police may become an issue if the other driver later claims the accident never happened or disputes that they were involved. Without a police report listing both drivers’ information and insurance details, you must rely on the photos, witness testimony, and other documentation you collected to prove the accident occurred and involved the specific individual you’re claiming against. If you exchanged information with the other driver at the scene and have photos showing their vehicle and license plate, you have strong proof connecting them to the accident even without police documentation. However, if the other driver becomes uncooperative and their insurance company disputes that their insured was involved in any accident, your case becomes more difficult without official police documentation, though not impossible with sufficient alternative evidence.
Should I hire an attorney if there’s no police report?
Hiring an attorney becomes especially valuable for accidents without police reports because lawyers know how to build strong cases using alternative evidence and can level the playing field against insurance companies that try to lowly settle or deny claims lacking official documentation. Most personal injury attorneys offer free initial consultations where they review your evidence and advise whether your case is strong enough to pursue without a police report. If your injuries are significant, if the other driver disputes fault, or if the insurance company offers a settlement far below your medical bills and lost wages, legal representation usually pays for itself through higher settlement amounts.
Attorneys can hire accident reconstruction experts who analyze photos and physical evidence to create professional reports explaining exactly how the accident occurred and establishing fault through scientific analysis. These expert reports often prove more persuasive than police reports because they involve more detailed investigation and analysis than officers typically conduct at accident scenes. Lawyers also handle all communication with insurance adjusters, preventing you from making statements that could harm your claim, and they can subpoena evidence like surveillance footage or phone records that individuals cannot access. Most personal injury attorneys work on contingency, meaning they receive payment only if you recover compensation, making legal representation accessible even if you cannot afford upfront attorney fees.
Conclusion
Handling a car accident without a police report requires diligent documentation and quick action, but thousands of accident victims successfully recover full compensation each year despite lacking official police documentation. Your photos, witness statements, medical records, and prompt insurance reporting provide the evidence needed to prove your claim and establish the other driver’s fault. While insurance companies may initially offer lower settlements for claims without police reports, strong alternative documentation often leads to fair settlements when you demonstrate that the evidence clearly establishes liability and damages.
If you’re struggling to negotiate a fair settlement, facing a denied claim, or dealing with significant injuries, consulting with an experienced personal injury attorney can help you build the strongest possible case using all available evidence. The legal team at Wetherington Law Firm understands how to handle accident claims without police reports and can help you gather the evidence needed to prove your case. Call (404) 888-4444 today for a free consultation to discuss your accident and learn about your options for recovering the compensation you deserve.