What evidence, like video or photos, should I gather to prove I wasn’t involved in the crash?: North Carolina law

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What evidence, like video or photos, should I gather to prove I wasn’t involved in the crash? - North Carolina

Short Answer

Gather time-stamped visuals and objective records that show where you were and what you were doing when the crash happened. In North Carolina, the most persuasive items include surveillance or dashcam video, cell-phone location data, vehicle GPS/telematics, receipts, work logs or access swipes, and witness contact info. Move fast—many cameras and devices overwrite data within days—then preserve originals and keep clear copies.

Understanding the Problem

You want to know what proof you can collect in North Carolina to show you were not involved in a crash. The core decision is: what types of evidence will convincingly place you somewhere else or otherwise rule you out? Focus on items that reliably show time and location, and be ready to preserve them quickly so they do not disappear.

Apply the Law

Under North Carolina law, evidence must be relevant (it makes a fact more or less probable) and properly authenticated (you can show what it is and where it came from). Courts in the civil division (District or Superior Court, depending on the claim) apply rules that favor reliable, original records. Timing matters because many electronic systems automatically delete or overwrite data. After a lawsuit is filed, you can use formal discovery and subpoenas; before that, you can request copies and send preservation letters.

Key Requirements

  • Relevance: The item must help show you were elsewhere or could not have been involved (time-place linkage).
  • Authenticity: You (or a custodian) can explain what the item is, how it was created, and that it is unchanged.
  • Reliability: Prefer system-generated records (business logs, GPS, app data) over purely personal notes.
  • Originals & quality: Keep native files with metadata; avoid editing, filters, or compression.
  • Preservation: Request that third parties keep relevant data before it’s overwritten (often within 7–30 days).
  • Lawful access: Get consent or use subpoenas for data held by others; do not access accounts you do not own.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because relevance and authenticity drive admissibility, focus on items that show your location and activity at the crash time and that are easy to verify. For example, a store’s security video showing you at the checkout at the crash time, paired with a receipt and a bank authorization text, checks relevance, authenticity, and reliability. Likewise, dashcam or vehicle GPS logs with matching phone location data give corroboration from independent sources.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: You or your attorney. Where: Start outside of court by contacting businesses (stores, parking lots, apartments), law enforcement records units, and any third parties with cameras; if a case is filed, use the civil division of your county’s court. What: Send written preservation requests and ask for native files; after suit, use discovery requests and subpoenas. When: Act immediately; many systems overwrite video in 7–30 days.
  2. Request and collect: surveillance/dashcam video, photos, receipts, timecards or access logs, phone location history, rideshare or toll records, and witness names/contact info. Keep originals; make read-only copies; document how you received each item.
  3. If a dispute continues: file suit and use formal discovery and subpoenas to custodians to obtain remaining data. The expected outcome is a set of admissible records and videos you can use in negotiations or at trial.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Do not edit, crop, filter, or re-save videos/photos; that can undermine authenticity. Keep the original files and metadata.
  • Do not access accounts or devices you do not own. Use consent or a subpoena to obtain third-party data.
  • Business records often need a custodian or affidavit to be admissible. Plan to identify the right witness early.
  • Relying on a single source can be risky. Corroborate with at least one independent record (e.g., receipt + video).
  • Be careful with statements to insurers; keep them factual and brief, and consider speaking to counsel first.

Conclusion

To show you were not involved in a North Carolina crash, collect relevant, authentic, and reliable proof that fixes your time and location: native surveillance or dashcam video, GPS/phone data, receipts, work/access logs, and witness info. Preserve originals and avoid edits. Your next step: send written preservation requests today to any business or agency that may have video or logs, because many systems overwrite data within 7–30 days.

Talk to a Personal Injury Attorney

If you need to quickly secure video, phone data, or business records to show you were not involved in a crash, our firm can help you preserve evidence and use the right legal tools to obtain it. Call us today to discuss your options and timelines.

Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.

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