Houston, TX — A gold-colored car allegedly ran a stop sign and crashed into an SUV, causing it to hit another car, in Houston this past Friday night, June 26, 2015. Apparently, 8 people were injured — including 5 children. The driver of the gold-colored car fled the scene and hasn’t been located yet.
This happened around 11:00 p.m., at the intersection of Dan Street and Lyons Street, shown in the map below.
A Nissan XTerra was driving along Lyons Sreet when it reach the intersection with Dan Street and was hit by a northbound gold car that had been driving north on Dan. Police think that driver ran their stop sign when they crashed into the Nissan SUV.
The gold car fled the scene, but the impact from the wreck actually flipped the SUV over and pushed it against another car.
A total of 8 people – 3 adults and 5 children – were all transported to a hospital for their injuries, though it didn’t seem like anyone was in life-threatening condition. The children were all under the age of 4, the news said.
The police are still searching for the gold-colored car that hit the Nissan SUV that night.
Know something we don't?
Help us get the facts straight. Leave us a comment below.
Map of the Accident
View from the Road
*We appreciate your feedback and welcome anyone to comment on our blog entries, however all visitor blog comments must be approved by the site moderator prior to showing live on the site. By submitting a blog comment you acknowledge that your post may appear live on the site for any visitors to see, pending moderator approval. The operators of this site are not responsible for the accuracy or content of the comments made by site visitors. By submitting a comment, blog post, or email to this site you acknowledge that you may receive a response with regard to your questions or concerns. If you contact Grossman Law Offices using this online form, your message will not create an attorney-client relationship and will not necessarily be treated as privileged or confidential! You should not send sensitive or confidential information via the Internet. Since the Internet is not necessarily a secure environment, it is not possible to ensure that your message sent via the Internet might be kept secure and confidential. When you fill out a contact or comment form, send us an email directly, initiate a chat session or call us, you acknowledge we may use your contact information to communicate with you in the future for marketing purposes, but such marketing will always be done consistent with the advertising ethics rules established by the State Bar of Texas and you will have the option to opt out of future communications.