Navarro County, TX — December 17, 2025, Steven Bergman was injured due to a car accident at approximately 4:00 a.m. along Interstate Highway 45.

According to authorities, 50-year-old Steven Bergman was traveling in a southbound Chrysler Pacifica on I-45 near F.M. 1603 when the accident took place.

Details surrounding the accident remain scarce. Officials indicate that, for as yet unknown reasons, a collision took place between the Pacifica, an Audi Q3, A Nissan Rogue, and a Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck.

Bergman reportedly sustained serious injuries over the course of the accident. It does not appear that anyone else was hurt.

Additional information pertaining to this incident is not available at this point in time. The investigation is currently ongoing.

Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman

When crashes involve multiple vehicles in the early morning hours, the unanswered questions can pile up fast. With limited visibility, fewer witnesses, and little margin for error, the real cause often slips through the cracks unless someone makes a point to dig deeper. That kind of effort is especially important when serious injuries are involved.

Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash?

With four vehicles tangled in a pre-dawn collision, understanding the sequence of events is no small task. Did investigators reconstruct how each vehicle entered the scene? Was the crash mapped using modern tools like laser scanners, or were conclusions based solely on visible damage and driver statements? At 4:00 a.m., fatigue, speed, and reaction time all become critical factors—but unless investigators took a systematic approach, there’s a real risk that crucial details were missed or misinterpreted.

Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash?

Whenever multiple vehicles collide without a clearly identified cause, mechanical failure has to be on the table. Did a brake system in one of the vehicles fail? Did a steering issue or sensor malfunction cause someone to veer or stop suddenly? Those questions don’t answer themselves, and without targeted inspections, problems like these can be completely overlooked—especially if a vehicle is quickly removed from the scene without being thoroughly examined.

Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected?

Modern vehicles carry electronic records that often tell a more accurate story than witness memory. Data from onboard systems can show who was braking, who wasn’t, and whether anyone tried to steer away. If GPS or infotainment systems were active, they might even help piece together what was happening in the moments before impact. With four vehicles involved, these records could be the only way to establish the true chain of events. But that requires someone to secure and review them promptly—before they’re lost or overwritten.

In a crash like this, the difference between assumption and understanding lies in the investigation. If key questions go unasked, the full story may never come to light.

  • Multi-vehicle crashes demand detailed reconstructions, not just basic reporting.
  • Mechanical problems need to be actively ruled out through physical inspection.
  • Electronic records are essential to understanding who did what and when.

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