Bexar County, TX — September 30, 2025, Adria Lightsey was injured as the result of a car accident at around 8:20 p.m. along Highway 151.

Details from authorities say that the crash took place at the TX-151 and Loop 1604 interchange west of the city.

Adria Lightsey Car Accident in San Antonio, TX

According to officials, 31-year-old Adria Lightsey was going along the road in a Hyundai Elantra. It’s said that a Chevy Malibu crashed due to inattention, causing a chain reaction with a third vehicle.

Reports say that Adria Lightsey was seriously injured. No other injuries were confirmed. At this time, no further information is available.

Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman

When a crash involves multiple vehicles and causes serious injuries, the focus can easily narrow too quickly on who “caused” it. But a crash like this deserves more than a simple blame judgment. It demands digging into how every element came together—and making sure each person’s side has evidence.

1. Did authorities conduct a complete, independent investigation?
In chain-reaction collisions, understanding the sequence matters. Did investigators map vehicle trajectories, collect witness statements, and document where each impact happened? Did they examine whether the crash was avoidable or whether someone had an opportunity to act differently? Without that thoroughness, conclusions risk being incomplete.

2. Were the vehicles inspected for mechanical problems or failures?
Even if one driver is cited for inattention, mechanical defects—brakes, steering, tires, sensors—can contribute to a crash. If the Elantra, Malibu, or any other involved car wasn’t inspected, a root cause might go unchecked.

3. Was electronic and telematic data preserved and analyzed?
These modern vehicles often record speed, braking, steering inputs, and alerts. Accessing that data can confirm or challenge narratives. If that information isn’t gathered early, it can vanish before it’s used.

A serious injury in a multi-car crash demands nothing less than complete diligence. It’s not just about assigning blame—it’s about making sure those involved have all the facts they need going forward.

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