Cherokee County, TX — October 5, 2025, David Whiteside Jr. was injured in a suspected drunk driver accident at about 7:20 p.m. on State Highway 21.
A preliminary accident report indicates that a westbound 2013 Ram 1500 collided with an eastbound 2025 Hyundai Elantra east of Alto, causing the pickup to overturn.

Hyundai driver David George Whiteside Jr., 35, was seriously injured in the crash, according to the report. Two children, a 5-year-old girl and a 4-year-old boy, in the car suffered minor injuries.
The Ram driver, who is suspected of driving while intoxicated, suffered minor injuries, the report states. He was cited for failure to drive in a single lane.
Authorities have not released any additional information about the Cherokee County crash at this time.
Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman
When I read about incidents like this one, what stands out to me isn’t just what happened, but what’s missing from the conversation; namely, how a person believed to be intoxicated ended up behind the wheel in the first place. That kind of question doesn’t just speak to personal responsibility; it also points to the broader system of alcohol service and the potential role of those who may have served that driver before the crash.
If alcohol did play a role here, then another important question naturally follows: Where did the driver get their alcohol, and was it from a business that served them past the point of obvious intoxication? In Texas, the law allows injured people, and their families, to explore whether an alcohol provider may have played a part in allowing a dangerous situation to unfold. It’s not always obvious, but dram shop law exists for this very reason: to hold alcohol-serving businesses accountable when they put the public at risk by overserving.
The idea behind these laws isn’t about punishing businesses for serving alcohol. It’s about protecting the public from preventable harm. When a driver is suspected of being intoxicated in a serious crash like this one, it’s worth asking whether a bar, restaurant, or other alcohol provider noticed warning signs and chose to keep serving anyway. If that happened, Texas law offers tools for the injured to pursue answers and accountability.
As we think about this crash and its consequences, the bigger picture is hard to ignore: this may not have been an isolated act of recklessness, but something enabled earlier in the day by others who should have known better. That’s the kind of oversight that dram shop law is built to examine, and it’s a conversation more people deserve to be aware of.
Key Takeaways:
- Dram shop laws in Texas exist to investigate whether a business contributed to a drunk driving crash by overserving an obviously intoxicated customer.
- If alcohol was involved here, a critical next step is identifying where the driver was drinking and whether signs of intoxication were ignored.
- Many people don’t realize that legal options may be available; not just against the driver, but potentially against an alcohol provider that failed in its responsibility to the public.