She Reported A Classmate For Rear-Ending Her, And Now He Might Get Kicked Out

It was supposed to be a quiet break between classes. Ninety minutes to kill, music playing, sitting in a parked car with a friend before heading back in. Nothing dramatic. Nothing memorable.

Then someone drove straight into her.

It wasn’t a huge crash. More like a careless bump. The kind people sometimes brush off as “no big deal.” But what happened next turned a minor accident into something a lot bigger.

Because it wasn’t just about the impact.

It was about how he handled it.

Here’s how it all unfolded.

'AITA for reporting a kid who rear ended me to my schools police??'

I (20F) attend a VERY small college in my area. Most of us know each other here.

One of my friends (19F) doesn’t have her license and usually walks to school.

Around 1 on Thursdays, I have a break that is about 90 minutes in between classes.

I live around an hour away so there is no point in going home between classes.

Anyways. I picked up my friend cuz we had the same next class, and we were sitting in my car listening to music before going in.

About 5 minutes before we had to go in, I get rear ended by a guy I know who goes to my school. He is younger and whatever.

It was a light tap, but could have been completely avoided by him not being stupid.

He drove into the spot way too fast and stopped right before he hit my car, then moved up also way too fast.

So me and my friend got out of the car and he did as well. I looked at the back of my car (which I only got around a month...

and it looks completely fine. He didn’t apologize or anything, which is weird, and the first thing he said when he got out of his pickup was “I didn’t feel...

I did ask for his insurance just incase anything came up, but if my car drove fine, I told him not to worry about it. At this point,

I was just about running late to class. He REFUSED to give me his insurance info.

He said he would only give it to me if there WAS a problem with my car. He insisted I take it for a drive to make sure before he...

I couldn’t cuz my next prof was one of those people who closes the door when class starts.

Anyways, I just said forget it and went to class with my friend. I drove my car home, and it ended up being fine.

When I got home, however, I got a text asking if me and my friend were okay cuz of the accident (which I never mentioned to ANYONE,

and neither did my friend) I said we were fine and asked how she knew. She said HE LEGIT TOLD HER!! Not only that,

HE SAID I WAS A female dog BECAUSE GOT OUT OF MY CAR TO SEE IF IT WAS DENTED OR ANYTHING. At this point, I am FURIOUS.

I texted him and said I need his insurance now. I tried to be nice and reasonable, but he hit my (perfectly still and parked) car and said I was...

He refused to. Today, I went to the school officer and reported him. Apparently, there has been MULTIPLE hit and runs, which are suspected to be him in the parking...

and now he may be kicked out of the school and/or face legal consequences. Sooo AITA?

I feel like I was pretty responsible at first, but one of my other friends said I should have handled it differently because my car was fine.

She had picked up her friend and parked near campus. With only a few minutes left before class, they were just sitting there when a guy from their school pulled into the spot behind her.

Too fast.

He stopped just short, then lurched forward again, right into the back of her car.

Both of them got out.

She checked her bumper. It looked fine. No visible damage, no obvious dents. Not ideal, especially since the car was new, but it could have been worse.

What stood out wasn’t the damage.

It was his reaction.

No apology. No concern. Just a casual, “I didn’t feel anything.”

That alone would’ve rubbed most people the wrong way.

Still, she kept it reasonable. She asked for his insurance information, just in case something showed up later. A standard, responsible move.

He refused.

Not outright aggressive, just dismissive. He insisted he’d only give it if there was visible damage. Even told her to go drive around first and check, as if that was a normal step in the middle of a campus parking lot, minutes before class.

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She didn’t have time for that.

So she let it go.

For the moment.

She went to class. Drove home later. The car seemed fine. No weird sounds, no obvious issues.

It could have ended there.

But then came the text.

Someone else, completely unrelated, reached out asking if she and her friend were okay after the accident.

That’s when things took a turn.

Because she hadn’t told anyone.

Neither had her friend.

Which meant he had.

And not just that.

He had apparently told people she was a “female dog” for getting out and checking her car.

That changed everything.

Up until that point, she had been willing to let it slide. Minor accident, no visible damage, no need to escalate.

But being hit, denied basic information, and then insulted behind her back? That’s a different situation.

She reached out again. Asked for his insurance.

He still refused.

At that point, it wasn’t about the car anymore. It was about accountability.

So she went to the school police and reported the incident.

That’s when she learned something unexpected.

There had been multiple hit-and-runs in that same parking lot. And he was suspected in several of them.

Suddenly, her situation wasn’t isolated.

It was part of a pattern.

That context matters.

Because reporting him didn’t create consequences out of nowhere. It connected him to behavior that may have already been happening.

And while her car seemed fine, modern vehicles don’t always show damage immediately. Bumpers can absorb impact in ways that aren’t visible. Sensors, internal structures, all of that can be affected without obvious signs.

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But even beyond that, there’s a basic expectation after any collision.

You stop. You exchange information. You take responsibility.

He didn’t do that.

Instead, he minimized it, refused to cooperate, and then tried to flip the narrative by insulting her.

That’s not a misunderstanding. That’s a choice.

There’s also something worth noting about her initial reaction.

She didn’t escalate right away. She didn’t call the police on the spot. She didn’t demand anything unreasonable. She asked for insurance, which is standard, and when pressed for time, she walked away.

If anything, she gave him more leeway than most people would.

It was his behavior afterward that closed that door.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Most people backed her decision completely. The general consensus was that even minor accidents require accountability, and his refusal to provide insurance was a major red flag.

Appropriate-Mall9781 − NTA. Even if it's just 'love taps', he's an inattentive driver and causing those accidents. He doesn't get to complain when he suffers the consequences of those actions.

3r14nd − NTA but you did f__k up. Next time you get into an accident, ask for insurance and if they don't give it to you, don't argue, take a...

the license plate, the position of everything (both cars and the surroundings) and then go to your car and call the police. Do not continue to engage with the other...

If they continue to try to argue, just tell him you're calling the police and they can handle it.

When you show up late to class make sure you bring the police report and show it to the professor as proof you had an emergency.

princess_ferocious − NTA. If he's not stopped now, he'll do some worse damage later.

Also, get your car checked if you can. Bumpers are designed to crumple and take the impact of a hit.

You might not be able to see any damage, but even a light tap could mean your bumper is less protective.

Minor damage like this could mean you'll be more likely to be injured if someone hits you harder.

My mum got hit by someone and the bumper looked fine, but shortly after we realised bits of the foam structure of the bumper were falling out.

The whole thing needed to be replaced, it wouldn't have been any help in a serious accident.

Several commenters pointed out that hidden damage is common, especially with modern cars, and that she was right to ask for information in the first place.

TuntBuffner − NTA

Ruin that person's insurance premiums

hellouterus − Beware. Even the lightest tap can cause loads of damage, especially now that cars are equipped with all their sensors and cameras and whatnot.

Plastic bumpers can 'pop' back out from a significant hit too, hiding damage beneath. Guy deserves whatever's coming for him. NTA.

HumbleBacon − NTA. He seems like an entitled p__ck. First thing he should’ve done was apologize, especially since you guys know each other.

Also, you never know if he actually has any insurance. So many people drive without insurance and have the audacity to drive like maniacs. He totally deserves whatever punishment he...

Big_Red_Batman − NTA. Seriously? I'm legitimately TIRED of people who question whether they're at fault for a situation they didn't create.

And when I read posts like this, more than 60% of the time they're written by a woman under 33 or 34. WAKE UP!

Don't accept that little voice in your head constantly telling you that you should have been nicer, or done something more,

or tried just one (or four, or nine more times) to protect the MAN WHO HIT YOUR PARKED CAR from the consequences of his actions.

Even if he had immediately given you his insurance info, you still needed to report the accident to the school officer. WTF?

The next time someone tries to blame even a particle of this situation on you, ask them if you should have taken out your checkbook, or immediately run to the...

Others focused on his attitude. The lack of apology, the name-calling, and the refusal to cooperate made it clear that this wasn’t just a one-off mistake.

Thomas_Becket2 − Nah, you may have saved people in the future of real damage by his carelessness.

Not that he'll learn anything from this experience, but if he gets kicked out of school at least he won't be around there anymore. NTA

Reading16 − Have you had your trunk checked for leaks? A friend got a tap on their car and saw no damage

so didn’t get the other driver’s info only to discover in the next storm that there was enough hidden damage to cause their trunk to leak

samsmashsigma − NTA genuinely why is he being so extra to the point of calling you a female dog for no good reason.

This didn’t start as a big deal.

It became one.

Not because of the accident, but because of everything that followed.

She gave him a chance to handle it the easy way. He didn’t take it.

At some point, accountability stops being optional.

So was reporting him an overreaction, or just the natural consequence of someone refusing to take responsibility?

 

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