Akeem Mogaji Killed in Truck Accident on U.S. 84 in Freestone County, TX
Teague, TX — June 16, 2025, Akeem Mogaji was killed due to a multi-vehicle truck accident at approximately 1:30 p.m. along U.S. Highway 84.
According to authorities, 44-year-old Akeem Mogaji was traveling in a northwest bound Lexus on U.S. 84 in the vicinity of the County Road 866 intersection when the accident took place.

Officials indicate that, for reasons yet to be confirmed, a northwest bound Kia Sorento failed to appropriately control its speed. A collision consequently followed between the Sorento, the Lexus and a GMC Sierra commercial pickup truck hauling a trailer.
Mogaji reportedly suffered fatal injuries over the course of the accident; the person driving the pickup truck suffered minor injuries, as well, reports state. Authorities have recommended charges against the person who had been behind the wheel of the Sorento. Additional details pertaining to this incident are not available at this point in time. The investigation is currently ongoing.
Commentary
When a crash involves multiple vehicles and claims a life, the first explanations often focus on a single driver’s mistake. But with serious outcomes like this, the deeper question is whether investigators are working to uncover every contributing factor—not just the most obvious one.
1. Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash?
With three vehicles involved, including a passenger car, an SUV, and a commercial pickup with a trailer, the dynamics are complex. Did investigators reconstruct speed, distance, and driver reactions? Was the trailer’s path documented to see if it amplified the severity of the wreck? Without that level of analysis, the report risks boiling a multi-vehicle fatal crash down to little more than “failure to control speed,” which doesn’t fully explain why the Lexus ended up in a deadly collision.
2. Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash?
It’s easy to assign fault to the Kia driver, but mechanical issues can’t be ruled out. Brake failure, stuck throttle, or problems with stability control could explain why the SUV didn’t slow in time. On the pickup’s side, trailer braking systems or load stability could have influenced the collision sequence. Even the Lexus should be considered—if its safety systems or tires failed, the outcome may have been worsened. Without inspecting all three vehicles, there’s no way to rule out hidden contributing factors.
3. Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected?
Each of the vehicles may hold key evidence. Event data recorders can confirm speed, throttle, braking, and steering activity in the seconds before impact. The pickup may also have GPS or telematics, which could add another layer of insight. Phone records for each driver could help confirm whether distraction was involved. And on a highway corridor like U.S. 84, traffic cameras or nearby security systems may have captured the chain of events. Without these digital records, the full picture remains incomplete.
When someone loses their life in a multi-vehicle crash, the explanation shouldn’t stop at a single traffic violation. Real accountability comes only from piecing together the physical, mechanical, and digital evidence until the full story is clear.
Key Takeaways:
- Multi-vehicle crashes require careful reconstruction of speed, timing, and vehicle movement.
- Mechanical or trailer-related issues may have contributed alongside driver behavior.
- Black box, phone, and camera data are essential to understanding the true cause.

“These are essential reads for anyone dealing with the aftermath of a truck wreck”– Attorney Cory Carlson