Benton County, MO — September 15, 2025, One person was killed following a car accident that occurred at around 1:46 P.M. on MO-C.

According to reports, a Dodge Ram operated by a 23-year-old man was traveling east on MO-C near MO-E when it crossed the dividing line for unknown reasons and over-corrected, causing it to lose control and leave the road where it struck a fence before rolling several times.
When first responders arrived at the scene they found the driver fatally injured and pronounced him deceased. No other vehicles were involved in the crash, and at this time official have not released the identity of the deceased, or provided an update on the investigation’s status.
Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman
When a young driver loses control and a truck ends up rolling off the road, the quick explanation often leans toward distraction or overcorrection. But serious crashes rarely happen without deeper causes, and those causes don’t reveal themselves unless someone takes the time to look past assumptions.
1. Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash?
A rollover is one of the most violent types of crashes, and it usually leaves behind a clear story in the tire marks, vehicle angles, and impact points. Did investigators measure those signs to see if the driver tried to steer or brake before the truck left the road? Did they reconstruct the sequence of movements leading up to the rollover? Without that effort, important clues about what triggered the loss of control may remain hidden.
2. Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash?
Pickup trucks, especially models with higher centers of gravity, can become unstable quickly if something goes wrong. A sudden tire blowout, steering problem, or brake failure could all force a driver into an overcorrection that spirals into a rollover. If the Dodge Ram wasn’t closely inspected before being towed away, the chance to uncover a defect may already be gone. And without that check, the crash risks being unfairly written off as driver error.
3. Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected?
Modern trucks often carry event data recorders that capture speed, braking, and steering inputs seconds before a crash. Phones, GPS devices, or dash cameras might also hold details that explain whether fatigue, distraction, or a mechanical issue was at play. If that data isn’t secured quickly, the opportunity to separate fact from speculation could be lost for good.
Rollovers don’t happen in a vacuum. Whether the cause was a sudden failure, a driver reaction, or a combination of both, the only way to understand it is by asking the right questions while the evidence is still fresh.
Takeaways:
- It’s not yet clear whether investigators reconstructed the Dodge Ram’s full path.
- A possible tire, brake, or steering failure may not have been ruled out.
- Electronic crash data and device records could hold answers if preserved.