Travis County, TX — December 18, 2025, four people were injured due to a car accident at approximately 11:30 p.m. along S.H. 45 (F.M. 620).

According to authorities, three people—a 32-year-old woman, a 10-year-old boy, and an 8-year-old girl—were traveling in a southwest bound Chevrolet Equinox on Farm to Market 620 near the Ridgeline Boulevard intersection when the accident took place.

Officials indicate that, for reasons yet to be confirmed, the Equinox attempted a lane change at an apparently unsafe time. A collision consequently occurred between the rear-end of the Equinox and the front-end of a southwest bound Lexus RX occupied by a 22-year-old woman.

The 10-year-old from the Equinox reportedly sustained serious injuries over the course of the accident. The three other people involved suffered minor injuries, as well, according to reports.

Additional details pertaining to this incident are not available at this point in time. The investigation is currently ongoing.

Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman

Late-night crashes involving families and children raise hard questions that go beyond who signaled or changed lanes. When injuries happen—especially to young passengers—it’s important to look past assumptions and figure out what actually caused the collision. That starts with a deeper investigation than what’s written in a standard report.

Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash?

A crash involving multiple occupants and an unsafe lane change claim calls for careful scene analysis. Did investigators map out where each vehicle was before and after the impact? Were lighting, speeds, and driver actions in the moments before the crash reviewed in detail? It’s one thing to say a lane change was “unsafe”—it’s another to prove it with data and physical evidence. Without that level of detail, conclusions about fault or timing may be premature.

Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash?

In a crash that reportedly began during a lane change, it’s worth asking whether the Equinox responded the way the driver expected. Was there a delay or failure in the steering system? Did any electronic assistance features misfire, such as blind spot monitoring or lane-keeping aids? Even a small glitch in a system like that could cause a driver to move at the wrong time or miss a vehicle in the adjacent lane. Unless someone inspects the vehicle directly, those failures can go unnoticed.

Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected?

Both the Equinox and the Lexus RX are equipped with event data recorders that can capture valuable information. Speed, acceleration, braking force, steering input—all of that can help show what each driver did and how the vehicles reacted. Phone records and GPS data might also help confirm whether distraction or hesitation played a role. With a serious injury on the line, especially involving a child, it’s essential that this kind of digital evidence is preserved early.

Crashes like this can’t be fully understood by glancing at damage or relying on assumptions about driver decisions. Real answers require careful, methodical work—and a willingness to consider all possible causes.

  • Lane-change crashes should be reconstructed in detail, not summarized by guesswork.
  • Vehicle systems can malfunction during critical maneuvers and need to be inspected.
  • Onboard data can confirm or challenge assumptions about how the crash happened.

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