McLennan County, TX — July 3, 2024, Cherly Compton and five others were injured due to a car accident just after 7:15 p.m. along Old Mexia Road.
According to authorities, 63-year-old Cheryl Compton and a 51-year-old man were traveling in an eastbound Ford F-150 pickup truck on U.S. 84 at the Old Mexia Road intersection when the accident took place.

Officials indicate that, for reasons yet to be confirmed, a northwest bound Jeep Cherokee occupied by four people entered the intersection at an apparently unsafe time, failing to yield the right-of-way at a stop sign. A collision consequently occurred between the front-left of the Jeep and the front-right quarter of the pickup truck. Reports state that the Jeep overturned over the course of the accident and ended up catching on fire.
Compton, the man who was a passenger with her in the pickup truck, and a 20-year-old woman from the Jeep reportedly sustained serious injuries due to the wreck. The 20-year-old man who had been behind the wheel of the Jeep and two 22-year-old men who had also been passengers suffered minor injuries, as well, authorities state. Additional details pertaining to this incident are not available at this point in time.
Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman
When multiple people are hurt in a violent crash, especially one involving a vehicle fire, the aftermath often brings more confusion than clarity. The initial narrative might suggest one party’s mistake, but these situations are rarely that simple—and assumptions can leave important truths buried.
1. Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash?
In a multi-vehicle collision with injuries and a vehicle fire, a surface-level investigation won’t cut it. Were investigators equipped to reconstruct the crash with precision? That includes mapping the intersection, analyzing pre-impact paths, and calculating vehicle speeds. With six people involved and claims of failure to yield, determining who actually entered the intersection first—or whether either vehicle was speeding—takes more than eyewitness memory. The risk is that some details get missed if the scene was cleared too quickly or if investigators lacked the training to fully break down the dynamics.
2. Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash?
The Jeep reportedly caught fire and overturned—two red flags that deserve a closer mechanical look. Could there have been a suspension failure that contributed to the rollover? Was there a fuel system issue that caused the fire to ignite? Also worth asking: did either vehicle have faulty brakes or warning systems that didn’t engage? When a collision seems like a result of human error, it’s easy to skip the mechanical side—but that can be a costly oversight.
3. Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected?
Both vehicles likely carried onboard data that could help reconstruct the sequence of events. The Jeep’s system might show whether the driver tried to brake or accelerate through the stop sign. The Ford’s data could confirm its speed and any pre-crash evasive actions. Pulling that data can clear up conflicting stories and also support—or contradict—witness statements. If phone use or distraction played a role, mobile data could help clarify the drivers’ attention in those last few seconds.
When everyone’s pointing to the stop sign, it’s easy to miss the bigger picture. But real answers often come from the evidence that’s not visible at first glance—and that’s exactly why asking the deeper questions matters.
Takeaways:
- A proper crash reconstruction is essential in multi-injury collisions with complex dynamics.
- Mechanical issues like suspension failure or faulty brakes may explain extreme outcomes like fire or rollover.
- Data from the vehicles and drivers’ phones could clarify timing, speed, and attention before the crash.