Ellis County, TX — December 1, 2025, Maverick Jones was injured due to a single-car accident shortly before 11:00 p.m. along Farm to Market 2377.
According to authorities, 44-year-old Maverick Jones was traveling in a northwest bound Lincoln MKX on F.M 2377 (Louise Ritter Road) near the Hollie Drive intersection when the accident took place.
Officials indicate that, for as yet unknown reasons, the Lincoln failed to safely maintain its lane of travel. It was consequently involved in a single-vehicle collision in which it apparently overturned.
Jones reportedly sustained 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 rolls over on a rural road late at night, it’s tempting to reach for easy explanations—maybe speeding, maybe distraction. But when the official cause is still “unknown,” that’s exactly when more questions need to be asked, not fewer. A rollover isn’t a routine crash, and it shouldn’t be treated like one.
Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash?
Any time a car overturns, particularly in a single-vehicle crash, the physical evidence matters. Was the road closely examined for signs of sudden steering or braking? Were roadway conditions or obstacles at the scene accounted for in the analysis? Without a full reconstruction, including mapping the vehicle’s path and reviewing vehicle dynamics, it’s impossible to say whether the crash was driver-caused—or something else entirely.
Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash?
The Lincoln MKX is built with systems designed to reduce the likelihood of rollovers, including stability control and traction management. If one of those systems failed—or if a suspension, tire, or steering component gave out—then the driver could have lost control through no fault of their own. These aren’t failures that show up in a quick once-over; they need a detailed inspection backed by proper diagnostics.
Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected?
Most newer vehicles, including the MKX, record telemetry data like speed, braking force, steering angle, and whether safety systems activated or failed. That data can show whether the vehicle responded to the driver’s input—or failed at the moment it mattered most. Phone use, GPS history, or even dashcam footage could also help fill in missing context. But all of that evidence has a shelf life. If it hasn’t been gathered yet, it may already be gone.
In crashes like this, it’s easy to focus on where the vehicle ended up. But the more important question is how it got there—and whether something beyond the driver’s control played a role.
Takeaways:
- Rollovers need more than a surface-level investigation; full reconstruction helps identify what triggered the crash.
- Vehicle systems like traction control or steering components must be examined for possible malfunction.
- Data from the car can show what really happened in the moments before it flipped—and whether the vehicle responded properly.