Bee County, TX — February 5, 2026, a pedestrian was injured due to an alleged drunk driver accident shortly after 4:45 p.m. along Saint Marys Street.
According to authorities, a 30-year-old man was on foot in the vicinity south of the Saint Marys Street and Louise Drive intersection when the accident took place.
Officials indicate that the man was struck by a westbound Ford Expedition being driven by a 27-year-old woman who had allegedly been under the influence of alcohol at the time. The man reportedly sustained serious injuries as a result of the collision.
Additional details pertaining to this incident—including the identity of the victim—are not available at this point in time. The investigation is currently ongoing.
Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman
When I read about pedestrian incidents where impairment is alleged, I’m reminded how exposed people on foot truly are—and how often the conversation stops at the driver’s arrest. That focus is understandable, but it can leave out a broader discussion about how these situations develop in the first place.
If reports are accurate and alcohol played a role here, one of the most important but often overlooked questions is where the driver had been drinking beforehand. Texas law recognizes that an alcohol provider may share responsibility if they served someone who was obviously intoxicated. That principle isn’t about redirecting blame; it’s about recognizing that impaired driving frequently begins with decisions made before anyone enters traffic. That’s the kind of question dram shop law is built to answer.
In many cases, once authorities determine that a driver may have been under the influence, the investigation centers on the roadway conduct and potential criminal charges. Whether a bar or restaurant overserved a patron can go unexamined unless someone looks deeper. For the injured party, that can mean important details about preventability remain unanswered. The law offers tools that many people don’t know they can use to explore whether responsible alcohol service standards were followed.
When I step back from incidents like this, I come back to the idea that accountability often has more than one layer. Looking at the full sequence of events—from alcohol service to the moment of impact—isn’t about speculation. It’s about understanding whether this was a situation that could have been interrupted before someone on foot was seriously hurt.
Three takeaways to keep in mind:
- Texas dram shop law allows scrutiny of alcohol providers when overservice to an obviously intoxicated person may have contributed to a crash.
- A complete investigation should examine where the alleged impaired driver was drinking, not just what occurred on the roadway.
- Many people are unaware that legal remedies may exist beyond the criminal case when serious injuries raise broader questions about responsibility.