Grand Prairie, TX — June 13, 2025, Hector Alvarez Arechar and Jose Ceron Cuautle were killed and Jonathan Santos and Juan Mata were injured in a car accident at 9:22 p.m. on E. Main Street.

Authorities said in preliminary statements that the accident happened off the corner of East Main Street and Loop 12.

Hector Alvarez Arechar, Jose Ceron Cuautle Killed, Jonathan Santos, Juan Mata Injured in Car Accident in Grand Prairie, TX

According to officials, 21-year-old Hector Alvarez Arechar and Jonathan Santos were in a Chrysler 300 traveling eastbound on Main Street. 40-year-old Jose Luis Ceron-Cuautle and 48-year-old Juan Mata were in a Chevy Silverado going northbound. The two vehicles somehow crossed paths and collided.

Due to the collision, both Hector Alvarez Arechar and Jose Ceron Cuautle were killed. Authorities say Jonathan Santos had serious injuries, while Juan Mata had possible minor injuries. At this time, additional details about the crash remain unconfirmed.

Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman

When a crash claims two lives and leaves others hurt, there’s no room for shortcuts in figuring out what went wrong. These are the kinds of cases where every unanswered question matters—and where the quality of the investigation can make all the difference.

Did the authorities dedicate enough time, tools, and resources to the investigation?
A multi-fatality crash at a major intersection should lead to a full reconstruction—scene measurements, vehicle trajectories, and thorough analysis of timing and driver behavior. But not every department has the tools or staffing to carry that out, especially at night. If this investigation lacked the resources it needed, critical facts may have never been documented.

Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash?
When two vehicles end up in each other’s path, there’s a chance that something went wrong inside one of them. Brake failures, steering malfunctions, or electronic issues could cause a driver to drift, swerve, or lose control. A complete mechanical inspection of both vehicles is the only way to know if either had a role in the crash.

Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected?
Onboard systems in modern vehicles can record what happened in the seconds leading up to a collision—speed, braking, and steering input. Phone records and GPS data could help fill in any gaps. That information is time-sensitive, and if no one moved quickly to retrieve it, it may already be gone.

Crashes with this level of impact call for a full accounting of every fact. Anything less risks leaving the truth buried, which is the last thing victims and families need in these situations.

Takeaways:

  • Serious collisions should always trigger full-scale, well-equipped investigations.
  • Mechanical issues must be ruled out with in-depth inspections of both vehicles.
  • Digital vehicle data can provide critical insight into what led to the crash.

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