Her child, her friend, her husband, her sibling....
Her husband? He is dead. I am pretty sure dead people can't insure cars.
Her child, her friend, her husband, her sibling....
Her husband? He is dead. I am pretty sure dead people can't insure cars.
She was a widow, so whose name could it have been in?
Because in some states you insure the car not the driver.
Was the car in her name?
How long has he been dead? Do we know?
If he just died recently it may still be insured in his name.
You can buy a year of insurance at a time.
It can also apply to anyone who drives the car. :twocents:
Suggestion: get an in-dash or dash mounted GPS. We got one installed when I wanted a back-up camera installed. My GPS also has Bluetooth, so I have all 3 on my dashboard: GPS, Bluetooth, and Backup Camera as well as stereo/CD player.I don't text when i drive. But sometimes I do have google maps or the traffic app WAZE up on my cell screen when I am in gridlock. I drive the Pacific Coast highway a few times a week. I always use WAZE because if it is closed due to an accident or a rockslide, you are screwed. You can be stranded for hours unless you find it in time to cut back over the canyons. I wonder if the victim might have had a map or a traffic app on her cell at the time?
BBM. That's what I had been wondering because we had a major storm up here in the Bay Area at the time.I think the roads were wet. It might not have been raining at the moment of the accident, but I believe it was raining all morning on the coast. I am just 8 miles inland, and it was raining for hours already. And I think it was a coastal storm that morning. So I think the roads were slick. JMO
ETA: I just read further along and apparently there were some skid marks...
That is not necessarily true. There are different things that come into play.In California you can not insure the car if the driver is unlicensed. You can not register the car if the owner is unlicensed. If the car belonged to someone else, even if the car were insured, it would not be covered by insurance if the driver was unlicensed.
Sounds like this woman had no business driving. I got my former neighbor arrested for driving on a suspended license, which I knew about because I had reported him for erratic driving for that!Here is the same thing from US msm.
"According to the DMV, Howe had not had a valid drivers license since 2007, when it expired. Jenner, who rear-ended Howes vehicle, has a valid license, the DMV said."
She had no valid license since 2007, when it expired. Did she have any insurance? If she didn't have a license, how could she have had insurance?
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-bruce-jenner-texting-fatal-crash-20150209-story.html
That is not necessarily true. There are different things that come into play.
While the driver is usually met with large consequences I am not sure that the insurance is automatically voided because the CAR is covered.
No, the car is not covered if the driver is unlicensed. At least, in Calif that is the case.
Sounds like this woman had no business driving. I got my former neighbor arrested for driving on a suspended license, which I knew about because I had reported him for erratic driving for that!
Well someone had to have insured the car and registered it.
A child's, Her husband?
A friend, A business. Many people.
We haven't heard the car WAS insured. Maybe it was not.
If she was okay driving without a DL for EIGHT years... insurance likely wasn't a huge concern either. :twocents:
She was a widow, her husband is dead. She had no children.
I don't know what friend is going to insure a car for someone who has no valid license. That insurance wouldn't be valid anyway.
How do you know the car had any insurance?