Bexar County, TX — May 30, 2025, Kylie Teague and one other person were injured in a car accident at approximately 7:30 a.m. along Interstate Highway 410.
According to authorities, 19-year-old Kylie Teague and a 22-year-old woman were traveling in an eastbound Nissan Sentra on Rigsby Avenue (U.S. Highway 87) at the Highway 410 intersection when the accident took place.

Officials indicate that, for as yet unknown reasons, the Nissan was involved in a collision with a Chevrolet Tahoe that had been traveling southbound on I.H. 410. The Sentra reportedly overturned over the course of the accident.
Teague sustained serious injuries over the course of the accident, according to reports. The other woman who had been with her in the Sentra suffered minor injuries, as well, reports state. 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 overturns at a major highway intersection, it’s not just a matter of impact—it’s a sign of a violent, high-force event that demands serious investigation. The fact that a young driver like Kylie Teague was seriously injured underscores the importance of figuring out exactly what went wrong, and whether anything could have prevented it.
Was the crash thoroughly investigated?
A rollover doesn’t happen without a specific chain of events. Investigators should have reconstructed the crash in detail—identifying approach angles, impact points, and vehicle speeds. Did the Nissan Sentra enter the intersection with the right-of-way? Was the Chevrolet Tahoe attempting a turn or continuing straight? Were traffic signals involved, and if so, were their timing sequences reviewed? These questions are critical, and if the answers weren’t backed by laser mapping and time-distance analysis, the full picture may still be missing.
Has anyone looked into possible vehicle defects?
In any rollover, it’s important to consider how the vehicle responded under stress. The Sentra is a lightweight car—vulnerable to being flipped by heavier SUVs like a Tahoe—but that doesn’t explain the whole story. Was there a failure in the suspension, steering, or braking system that affected how the Sentra reacted during the collision? Did its safety features perform as they should have? These questions can’t be answered with a glance—they require a focused mechanical inspection, especially when serious injuries result from the crash.
Has all the electronic data been collected?
Both vehicles likely carry event data recorders that track pre-crash behavior: speed, throttle, braking, and steering inputs. For the Sentra, this could confirm whether Kylie tried to slow down or steer away in the moments before impact. For the Tahoe, the data may show whether the driver had time to react—or whether the SUV was moving too fast for the conditions. GPS or phone-based navigation history might also offer insight into traffic patterns and the timing of the crash. These data points often tell the part of the story that the crash scene can’t.
When a young driver is left seriously hurt in a complex intersection crash, it’s not enough to assign blame based on direction of travel. Every detail—mechanical, digital, and physical—has to be brought together to explain how two vehicles ended up in the same space at the same time.
- Rollover crashes demand full reconstruction to clarify speeds, angles, and potential evasive actions.
- Mechanical systems in the struck vehicle should be checked to ensure no failure contributed to the loss of control.
- Vehicle data from both parties can reveal pre-impact decisions and possible missed chances to avoid the crash.