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If I have an auto accident, do I have to stop?
Yes. Georgia / Atlanta law says you must stop-whether the accident involves a pedestrian, a moving car, a parked car or someone's property. If you drive away, you can be charged with hit and run even if the accident was not your fault. You must also exchange information with the other driver-your name and driver's license number, the vehicle identification number of the car you are driving, the name and address of the car's owner, the name and address of your insurance company and your insurance policy number (or other evidence of financial responsibility, such as a bond posted with the Department of Motor Vehicles). Hit-and-run penalties
are severe. Depending on the damage or injuries, you may be fined, sent to jail or both. You also could lose your driver's
license. If you hit a parked car or other property, try to find the owner or driver. If you cannot, the law says you may drive away only after you leave behind, in a conspicuous place, your name, address and an explanation of the accident, and the name and address of your car's owner (if other than yourself). You also must notify the local police either by telephone or in person as soon as possible. You must call the police if the accident caused a death or injury. An officer who comes to the scene of the accident will conduct an investigation. If an officer doesn't show up, you must make a written report on a form available at the police department as soon as possible. 2. What should I do if someone is injured? The law requires you to give reasonable assistance to anyone who is injured. For example, you may need to call an ambulance, take the injured person to a doctor or hospital, or give first aid-if you know how. If you are not trained in the appropriate first aid procedures, do not move someone who is badly hurt; you might make the injury worse. However, you should move someone who is in danger of being hurt worse or killed (for example, in a car fire) even if you do make the injury worse. To help prevent additional collisions, try to warn other motorists that an accident has occurred. Placing flares on the road (only if there are no flammable fluids or items nearby), turning on your car's hazard lights and lifting the engine hood are usually good ways to warn others on the road. Arrange to get help for anyone who is injured, and try not to panic. As soon as you can get to a telephone, call 911. Explain the situation and give the exact location of the accident, so that help can arrive quickly. Be sure to mention whether you need an ambulance or a fire engine. Remain on the telephone until the operator tells you it is okay to hang up. Or, flag down a passing car and ask the driver to go for help. The driver may have a cellular phone in the car and can make an emergency call on the spot. 4. What information should I gather at the accident scene? Since many records now are confidential under the law, you may not be able to obtain the information that you want from the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV). So be sure to get as much correct and complete information as you can at the scene of the accident. You and the other driver should show each other your driver's licenses and vehicle registrations. Then you should write down:
5. If I think the accident was my fault, should I say so? Do not volunteer any information about who was to blame for the accident. You may think you are in the wrong and then learn that the other driver is as much or more to blame than you are. You should first talk to your insurance agent, your lawyer or both. Anything you say to the police or the other driver can be used against you later. Do not agree to pay for damages or sign any paper except a traffic ticket (see
#6) until you check with your insurance company or lawyer. For instance, if you were driving 30 miles an hour, say so. Do not say, "I wasn't speeding." Sign it. A ticket has nothing to do with your guilt or innocence. When you sign, you are only promising to appear in court to contest the ticket, or to pay it later if you wish. If you do not sign the ticket, the police officer can arrest you. While it is okay to sign the ticket, you may want to talk with your lawyer before you pay a fine or plead guilty to the charges. Find out if you can attend traffic school instead. If you plead guilty, you may hurt your chances of collecting damages from the other driver later. Or, you may help the other driver to collect damages from you.
YES!!!!!!!!!!!! Car Accidents in Atlanta, Dekalb, Gwinnett and HWY 78, Stone Mountain are fairly common. In a car accident the entire whiplash
injury occurs in about 1/10th of a second , the length of an eye blink. But in that time, the human head can experience forces
greater than that of jet fighter pilots.
Car Crash Stats: There were nearly 6,420,000 auto accidents in the United States in 2005. The financial cost of these crashes
is more than 230 Billion dollars. 2.9 million people were injured and 42,636 people killed. About 115 people die every day
in vehicle crashes in the United States -- one death every 13 minutes.
Automobile accidents, which occur every 10 seconds somewhere in the United States, are the No. 1 cause of personal injury
claims. Personal injury can be anything from a pinched nerve or broken arm to a sprained knee. It can also involve the loss
of a limb or death.
Car Accident Website, for more information please click here. |
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