Creekwood Acres, TX — September 21, 2025, Sammaya Commings was injured due to a single-car accident shortly after 6:45 p.m. along Kuykendahl Road.
According to authorities, 28-year-old Sammaya Commings was traveling in a northbound Kia Forte on Kuykendahl Road in the vicinity north of the Creek Wood Drive intersection when the accident took place.

Officials indicate that, for reasons yet to be confirmed, the Kia was involved in a single-vehicle collision in which it apparently crashed into a ditch. Commings 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 someone is seriously hurt in a single-vehicle crash, it often leads to quiet assumptions—usually that the driver must’ve simply made a mistake. But that kind of thinking can cut short the investigation before the real answers come into view. There’s almost always more to consider if someone takes the time to look.
1. Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash?
A car ending up in a ditch might seem straightforward, but that doesn’t mean the scene should be treated like routine business. Did crash investigators map the vehicle’s path with precision? Was there an analysis of braking, steering, or signs the driver tried to regain control? Some officers are trained in this level of crash reconstruction—others are not. When that depth of review is missing, important details can fall through the cracks.
2. Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash?
A sudden loss of control can be triggered by more than just driver behavior. A steering linkage failure, suspension collapse, or even an electronic glitch could send a car off course without warning. These aren’t issues that leave obvious marks on the road. Unless the Kia was inspected by someone with mechanical expertise, there’s no way to rule out whether something under the hood played a role.
3. Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected?
In crashes like this, vehicle data often tells the part of the story the driver can’t. Speed, brake usage, steering angles—these can all be pulled from the car’s systems if someone moves quickly to secure them. GPS and phone activity could also show what was happening in the moments before the crash. If that information isn’t gathered promptly, it may be lost—and with it, any chance of understanding what really happened.
These kinds of accidents may not make headlines, but they deserve the same level of scrutiny as any multi-vehicle crash. Serious injuries demand serious questions—and careful attention to the answers that too often get missed.
Takeaways:
- Even solo crashes need full scene analysis to uncover key details.
- Mechanical failures should be considered when a vehicle suddenly veers off.
- Electronic data may hold the answers but disappears if not collected in time.