Wyldwood, TX — May 27, 2025, Jose Suarez was injured following a single-car accident shortly after 8:45 p.m. along Farm to Market 1209.

According to authorities, 27-year-old Jose Suarez was traveling in a southwest bound Ford F-150 pickup truck on F.M. 1209 in the vicinity of the Stephen F Austin Boulevard intersection when the accident took place.

Jose Suarez Injured in Single-car Accident on F.M. 1209 in Bastrop County, TX

Officials indicate that, for as yet unknown reasons, the pickup truck failed to safely maintain its lane of travel. It was consequently involved in a single-vehicle collision in which it apparently struck a tree. Suarez reportedly suffered serious injuries over the course of the accident. Additional details pertaining to this incident are not available at this point in time. The investigation is currently ongoing.

Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman

When a vehicle leaves its lane and ends up crashing into a tree, the assumption usually points straight to driver error. But single-vehicle accidents—especially those that result in serious injuries—require more scrutiny than that. It’s not just about what happened. It’s about why it happened.

Was the crash thoroughly investigated?

When a pickup truck like the Ford F-150 drifts off the road and crashes, it’s important that investigators examine more than the final impact. Was there any sign of braking or steering before the truck left its lane? Did the scene show a gradual drift or a sharp departure? These kinds of questions are only answered with a full scene analysis—mapping skid marks, tracking the vehicle’s path, and understanding the timing of driver reactions. Without those details, what caused the lane departure could remain speculation.

Has anyone looked into possible vehicle defects?

A vehicle like the F-150 relies on a combination of mechanical and electronic systems to keep it stable. A sudden failure in the steering, brakes, or even a tire blowout could easily send the truck off course. Electronic stability systems, throttle control, and power steering are all critical components—and if one of them didn’t perform as expected, Suarez may not have been able to maintain control. These problems don’t always leave visible signs in the wreckage. If the truck was towed away without a detailed inspection, the opportunity to catch a mechanical failure may already be gone.

Has all the electronic data been collected?

The F-150 likely has an event data recorder that stores pre-crash information like speed, brake use, throttle input, and steering activity. That data could confirm whether Suarez attempted to steer or slow down—or if the truck simply didn’t respond. GPS data or app-based tracking could also offer insight into the route and any abrupt changes in movement. These digital clues can tell a story that even a witness can’t, but they have to be retrieved quickly before they’re lost or overwritten.

Single-vehicle crashes don’t just speak for themselves. Finding out why a truck left the road means going beyond assumptions and putting every possible cause under the microscope.

  • A full reconstruction is needed to understand the vehicle’s movement and whether any corrective action was attempted.
  • Steering, brakes, or electronic failures should be thoroughly checked, not assumed away.
  • Vehicle data can reveal whether the truck responded to the driver—or left him without options.

Explore cases we take