Mission Bend, TX — April 8, 2025, two teenagers were injured due to a car accident at approximately 9:45 p.m. along Addicks Clodine Road.

According to authorities, two teenagers—and 18-year-old man and a 16-year-old girl—were traveling in a northbound Infiniti on Addicks Clodine Road at the Cabildo Drive intersection when the accident took place.

2 Teens Injured in Car Accident on Addicks Clodine Rd. in Harris County, TX

The intersection is apparently controlled by a four-way stop. Officials indicate that, for as yet unknown reasons, the Infiniti entered the intersection at an apparently unsafe time, failing to heed the stop sign. A collision consequently took place between the front-end of the Infiniti and the left side of a Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck that had been traveling westbound on Cabildo Drive.

Both of the teenagers from the Infiniti reportedly sustained serious injuries over the course of the accident. It does not appear that anyone from the pickup truck was hurt. Additional details pertaining to this incident—including the identities of the victims—are not available at this point in time. The investigation is currently ongoing.

Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman

When a crash happens at a controlled intersection and leaves people seriously hurt, the focus often jumps straight to who didn’t stop. But a deeper look can reveal whether that first assumption tells the whole story.

Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash?
If the Infiniti entered the intersection without yielding, the key question is why. Did investigators check for skid marks showing last-second braking? Did they examine the sequence of events in both vehicles’ paths leading to impact? Crash reconstruction can uncover whether the timing and vehicle speeds line up with the initial assumption—or if something else was happening in those critical seconds. Without that level of detail, the cause can remain incomplete.

Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash?
A failure in the Infiniti’s braking system, steering, or even its stop-sign recognition sensors could cause the driver to enter the intersection unexpectedly. These problems might not be obvious in a post-crash walkaround, especially if electronic safety systems malfunctioned without a visible breakage. Unless the car is inspected promptly, that line of inquiry can disappear before anyone realizes it was worth exploring.

Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected?
Both vehicles likely carried valuable digital records. The Infiniti’s event data could show speed, brake application, and throttle position before impact, while the pickup might have logged its own movements. Combined with nearby traffic camera footage or phone records, this information could help verify whether the driver tried to stop, was distracted, or experienced a mechanical failure. That evidence, however, is time-sensitive and can be lost quickly.

At first glance, running a stop sign may look like the whole story. But a thorough investigation means asking not just what happened—but why.


Takeaways:

  • Intersection crashes deserve a detailed reconstruction to verify timing and driver actions.
  • A mechanical or electronic failure could cause a vehicle to enter an intersection unexpectedly.
  • Preserving vehicle, camera, and phone data quickly is key to getting the full picture.

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