St. Charles County, MO — July 12, 2025, One person was killed following a car accident that occurred at around 1:31 P.M. on Highway 94.

According to reports, a Honda Accord operated by a 37-year-old man was traveling on Highway 94 at the Sherman Drive intersection, when the vehicle left the road for unknown reasons and struck a traffic pole.
When first responders arrived on-scene they found the driver critically injured and transported him to the hospital where he later succumbed to his injuries. The driver’s identity has not been released, and officials have not released and update on the status of the investigation.
Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman
When a vehicle leaves the roadway and strikes a fixed object like a traffic pole—with no other vehicles involved and no immediate explanation—it raises questions that deserve more than a passing glance. These are the kinds of crashes where the cause isn’t always visible, and getting to the truth requires looking beyond the obvious.
1. Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash?
In single-vehicle collisions involving a fatality, investigators should document more than just where the vehicle ended up. They should reconstruct the vehicle’s path, check for braking or steering input, and assess whether the driver made any attempt to correct course before impact. Skid marks, yaw patterns, and vehicle angle at impact can all provide crucial information. If those elements weren’t thoroughly reviewed at the scene, critical details may have gone unrecorded.
2. Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash?
When a car leaves the road without a clear reason, mechanical failure has to be considered. A loss of steering control, brake malfunction, or even an electronic stability system failure could have played a role. These issues often leave no obvious evidence and can only be identified through a detailed post-crash inspection. If the Honda Accord was not carefully examined for signs of malfunction, a contributing cause may have been missed.
3. Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected?
Most newer vehicles store critical data that can help reconstruct the final moments before a crash—speed, throttle position, brake input, and steering angle. This kind of information can reveal whether the vehicle was reacting properly to driver commands or if something failed. GPS and phone data may also offer insight into distraction or last-second maneuvers. Without preserving this data quickly, that information could be lost.
When a crash with no immediate cause is clear, the only responsible response is to dig deeper. That’s the difference between assuming and understanding.
Takeaways:
- Fatal single-vehicle crashes require full reconstruction of vehicle path and driver input.
- Mechanical or electronic system failures must be ruled out through thorough inspection.
- Electronic vehicle data can provide a reliable account of what happened just before the crash.