Caruthersville, MO — August 27, 2025, Two people were injured following a car accident that occurred at around 5:30 P.M. on Highway D.

According to reports, a Ford F-250 with two male occupants was traveling south on Highway D when it lost control for unknown reasons and left the road where it overturned.
When first responders arrived they found the 44 and 55-year-old occupants seriously injured and transported them to the hospital where their conditions are unknown. No other vehicles were involved in the crash, and officials have not released any updates on the investigation.
Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman
When a truck suddenly leaves the road and overturns, the explanation is rarely as simple as “loss of control.” Incidents like this often have deeper causes, and without careful investigation, the reasons may remain unclear.
1. Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash?
It’s uncertain whether investigators reconstructed the sequence of events or limited their review to documenting the aftermath. A detailed analysis should include mapping the truck’s path, checking for skid or yaw marks, and examining whether the driver attempted evasive maneuvers. It’s also important to consider whether fatigue, distraction, or a medical episode contributed. Too often, single-vehicle rollovers don’t receive the same level of scrutiny as multi-vehicle crashes, even though they can be just as complex.
2. Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash?
Large pickups like the Ford F-250 carry risks tied to their size and design—issues with steering, suspension, or tires can make them difficult to control in an instant. A tire blowout, brake malfunction, or even a stability system failure could have played a role here. Unless the truck was carefully inspected right after the crash, those clues may now be lost.
3. Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected?
Trucks of this type often include event data recorders that capture steering inputs, braking, speed, and other vehicle behaviors in the moments before impact. That information could clarify whether the driver made corrective actions or if the truck’s systems failed to respond properly. GPS data, nearby surveillance, and phone records could also help fill in the timeline. Without this evidence, the investigation risks resting on assumptions rather than facts.
Even when only one vehicle is involved, a thorough and deliberate review is essential. The difference between speculation and understanding often comes down to whether the right questions are asked.
Key takeaways:
- Single-vehicle rollovers require detailed reconstruction, not just surface-level review.
- Mechanical failures in large pickups can quickly cause loss of control.
- Vehicle data, GPS, and phone records may hold critical answers about what actually happened.