Bosque County, TX — June 5, 2025, one person was killed and six were injured after a car accident at around 6:00 a.m. along FM 219.
According to initial details about the accident, it took place northeast of town near the intersection of FM 219 and FM 3265.

Investigators said that six people were in a Ford Expedition said to be going southbound along the roadway. From the oncoming lane, a northbound Ford Escape reportedly crossed left of center. The two vehicles then collided head-on.
As a result of the collision, the Escape driver was killed. Two people from the Expedition were reportedly in critical condition while the remaining four had unspecified injuries. While details are not confirmed right now, authorities say the possibility of impaired driving is under investigation.
Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman
When authorities note that impairment is being investigated in a serious crash, it’s a sign that there may be more to the story than what happened on the road. In situations like this—where one person was killed and several others were injured—it’s not just about how the vehicles collided. It’s also about whether someone else may have played a role long before the crash occurred.
At this point, it’s not confirmed whether impairment was a factor. But if it turns out alcohol was involved, one critical question will be whether that driver had been over-served while obviously intoxicated. Under Texas dram shop law, alcohol providers have a legal obligation not to continue serving patrons who show signs of obvious intoxication. That standard exists precisely because decisions made inside an establishment can ripple outward into deadly accidents like this.
Unfortunately, those questions often go unasked. Law enforcement typically focuses on the scene itself—what happened, who was hurt, and whether criminal charges are warranted. They’re not always in a position to trace a driver’s condition back to its source. Without a deeper investigation, the role of an alcohol provider—if one was involved—may never come to light.
In the hours and days after a major crash, attention understandably stays on the immediate impact. But long-term accountability sometimes requires looking farther back, to the decisions that made such a collision possible in the first place.
Three key takeaways:
- Though impairment hasn’t been confirmed, Texas law prohibits alcohol providers from over-serving anyone who is obviously intoxicated.
- Even in major crashes, the question of where and how a driver may have been drinking is often left unexamined.
- If alcohol is found to be involved, investigating over-service is essential to understanding whether the harm could have been prevented.