Waller County, TX — April 8, 2025, a man was injured due to a single-vehicle car accident just before 12:00 midnight along Farm to Market 1488.
According to authorities, a 28-year-old man was traveling in a southwest bound Dodge Ram 2500 pickup truck on F.M. 1488 in the vicinity northeast of the Oak Hollow Boulevard intersection when the accident took place.

Officials indicate that, for reasons yet to be confirmed, the vehicle failed to safely maintain its lane of travel and apparently took faulty evasive action. It was consequently involved in a single-vehicle collision in which it struck a tree, reports state. The man reportedly sustained serious injuries over the course of the accident. Additional details pertaining to this incident—including the identity of the victim—are not available at this point in time. The investigation is currently ongoing.
Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman
Late-night crashes involving only one vehicle can easily be brushed off as simple mistakes, but serious injuries demand a closer look at what really happened. A label like “faulty evasive action” doesn’t explain why the driver had to take evasive action in the first place.
Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash?
If the truck suddenly left its lane and hit a tree, the sequence of events before that point matters. Did investigators measure skid or yaw marks to see how quickly the vehicle changed course? Was the driver’s path reconstructed to figure out what triggered the evasive maneuver? Some crash teams dig into those details, while others may stop at the obvious end result, leaving important context out of the record.
Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash?
A steering or brake failure could force a driver to take desperate action. Even modern stability control systems can misfire, making a truck react in ways the driver didn’t intend. Without a mechanical inspection—checking everything from suspension components to electronic controls—it’s impossible to rule out a defect. Unfortunately, those inspections often don’t happen unless someone pushes for them early.
Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected?
A Dodge Ram 2500 is capable of storing detailed event data: speed, brake use, steering input, and more. Combined with GPS records, phone logs, or nearby surveillance cameras, that information could reveal whether the driver was reacting to something sudden or if the truck behaved unexpectedly. But that kind of evidence can be lost quickly if it’s not preserved soon after the crash.
What might look like a simple lane departure could actually have a more complicated backstory. The only way to know is to gather and protect the evidence before it fades away.
Takeaways:
- “Faulty evasive action” is a description, not an explanation—investigations should look for the cause.
- A mechanical or electronic defect can force a driver into sudden, dangerous maneuvers.
- Vehicle and phone data can reveal the moments leading up to a crash—but only if retrieved quickly.