Ellis County, TX — January 7, 2026, Maximus Glenn was injured in a car accident at about 6:15 p.m. on State Highway 34 east of Ennis.
A preliminary accident report indicates that an eastbound 2005 Chrysler Crossfire was turning left onto F.M. 66o when it collided with a 2021 Toyota Tacoma.
Toyota driver Maximus Glenn, 19, was seriously injured in the crash, according to the report.
The Chrysler driver, who suffered minor injuries, was charged with turning when unsafe, the report states.
Authorities have not released any additional information about the Ellis County crash at this time.
Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman
After serious crashes, early reports often sound complete on the surface. A citation is issued, a brief narrative is released and attention moves on. But those first summaries rarely answer the deeper questions that matter when someone is left with lasting injuries.
Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash? One of the first things worth asking is how much work went into the investigation beyond a basic scene review. In complex collisions, it matters whether investigators took time to map vehicle paths, document damage patterns and study what each driver was doing in the moments before impact. Some officers have advanced training in crash reconstruction, while others are asked to handle these cases with limited tools or experience. If the investigation stopped once a violation was noted, important details about timing, speed or driver reactions may never have been explored.
Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash? When a collision involves turning movements and split-second decisions, mechanical issues should not be ruled out. Problems like delayed braking, steering resistance or sensor failures do not always leave obvious clues at the scene. Without a careful inspection of both vehicles, a hidden defect could be missed. That kind of oversight can shape conclusions in ways that are not fully grounded in what actually happened.
Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected? Modern vehicles quietly record valuable information. Data showing speed, throttle use, braking and steering input can confirm or challenge assumptions made at the scene. Phone records, GPS data and nearby camera footage can also help clarify timing and driver attention. If this electronic evidence was not secured early, key facts may be lost for good.
Taking the time to ask these questions is not about second-guessing for its own sake. It is about making sure decisions are based on a full picture, not just the quickest explanation. When injuries are serious, careful investigation is the only way to reach conclusions that truly hold up.
Key Takeaways:
- Early crash reports often leave important questions unanswered.
- Mechanical issues can play a role even when no defect is obvious.
- Electronic data can confirm what really happened before impact.