Basic Facts

Crash date: 2-5-2026

Crash location: Farm-to-Market 2920, northwest Harris County, TX

People involved:

  • Levi May, 25
  • Unidentified Man, 35

Do Authorities suspect alcohol played a role in this crash?: Unknown

Did authorities recommend criminal charges?: Unknown

Do authorities suspect a product defect caused the crash?: Unknown

Accident Report

February 5, 2026, Levi May was injured as the result of a car accident at around 10:28 p.m. along FM 2920.

Authorities said that the crash took place off the corner of FM 2920/Main Street and Hufsmith-Kohrville Road.

Investigators said that 25-year-old Levi May was on a Kawasaki motorcycle going westbound through the intersection. A Toyota Tundra was going eastbound. At the intersection, the vehicles crossed paths and collided.

Due to the collision, Levi May was seriously injured. No other injuries were reported. At this time, additional details are unavailable.

How Did This Accident Occur?

Vehicles going opposite directions and colliding at an intersection usually means that one of the drivers failed to yield the right of way. I don’t have enough information to make that kind of determination. I’d certainly discourage others from jumping to conclusions. Unfortunately, the fact one of the vehicles was a motorcycle could lead to exactly that.

The fact of the matter is a lot of people think the worst of motorcyclists. They tend to automatically assume the rider was being reckless even when there isn’t clear evidence available yet. Obviously, assumptions like that may be right sometimes. I’m not going to pretend motorcyclists are above making mistakes. But I’ve had many cases involving motorcyclists where riders were victims of circumstances beyond their control. I’ve even had cases where authorities blamed a motorcyclist only for our independent investigations to prove the motorcyclist did nothing wrong.

At the end of the day, it’s the evidence that determines who was in the wrong—whether that’s one of the drivers, the manufacturer of a defective part, a city failing to put up proper signage or lighting, or any number of other scenarios. If people want to instead let bias cloud their judgment and risk blaming someone for something they couldn’t avoid, that’s their choice. For me, I’ve simply seen too many examples of negative bias getting in the way of a proper accident investigation to ever make that same mistake.

Agree? Disagree? Let me know in the comments.

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