Denton County, TX — August 4, 2024, Odis Fleming and another person were injured due to a car accident just after 12:30 p.m. along Farm to Market 423.
According to authorities, 51-year-old Odis Fleming was traveling in a northbound Lexus on F.M. 423 at the Little Elm Parkway intersection when the accident took place.

Officials indicate that, for as yet unknown reasons, a southbound Toyota 4Runner occupied by a 52-year-old woman attempted a left turn at an apparently unsafe time, failing to yield the right-of-way to oncoming traffic. A collision consequently occurred between the front-right quarter of the Toyota and the front-end of the Lexus.
Both Fleming and the woman from the Toyota reportedly sustained serious injuries over the course of the accident. They were each transported to local medical facilities by EMS in order to receive necessary treatment. Additional details pertaining to this incident are not available at this point in time.
Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman
When serious injuries follow a left-turn collision, it’s not enough to stop at the basic who-had-the-right-of-way explanation. The real value comes from asking how the crash unfolded—and whether it could’ve been prevented with better insight or more complete evidence.
Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash?
Left-turn collisions are common, but not all are investigated equally. Did the officers document the distance between vehicles when the Toyota began its turn? Did they measure braking marks, vehicle angles, or estimate speed based on vehicle damage? A lot can hinge on whether the driver mistimed the gap or whether the Lexus had any opportunity to react. Without full reconstruction, important questions stay unanswered.
Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash?
A malfunction—whether in the steering, brakes, or accelerator—could explain why the Toyota turned late or failed to clear the lane in time. Similarly, if the Lexus had braking or traction issues, that might have affected its ability to avoid the collision. These aren’t issues anyone can spot just by looking at the cars post-impact. They require hands-on mechanical inspection—something that often gets overlooked.
Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected?
Both vehicles likely had onboard systems recording what happened in the seconds before the crash—speed, braking, steering angle, and driver input. That data could make it clear whether either driver had time to avoid the collision, or whether one vehicle was moving faster than reported. Dash cams, traffic signal logs, or nearby surveillance could fill in other missing pieces if checked early enough.
A turn at the wrong time is often just the start of the story. If no one digs deeper into what really happened, the risk is not just misjudging the drivers—but misjudging the whole situation.
Key Takeaways
- Left-turn collisions need scene mapping and detailed timing analysis, not just fault assignment.
- Vehicle malfunctions might have contributed to either the unsafe turn or inability to avoid impact.
- Crash data and nearby surveillance can clarify the moments leading up to impact.