Hana Bavcic Injured in Car Accident in College Station, TX
College Station, TX — September 27, 2025, Hana Bavcic was injured in a car accident at about 3:25 p.m. on State Highway 6/Earl Rudder Freeway.
A preliminary accident report indicates that a 2015 Ford Mustang was heading southeast when it crashed into a guardrail near Bridle Gate Drive.

Driver Hana Bavcic, 20, was seriously injured in the crash, according to the report.
Authorities have not released any additional information about the Brazos County crash at this time.
Commentary by Attorney Michael Grossman
After a serious car wreck, it’s natural to focus on what’s already known: time, place, injuries. But real answers rarely come from surface-level facts. What matters most is whether the right questions were asked before conclusions were drawn.
Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash? In a case like this, a single-vehicle collision into a guardrail might appear straightforward. But appearances can be misleading. Was the crash site fully documented using advanced methods like laser mapping? Did investigators look at the vehicle’s trajectory, the driver's inputs leading up to the impact, or even their condition before getting behind the wheel? The level of training and attention applied during these early steps often determines whether critical evidence is preserved, or missed altogether.
Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash? Cars like the 2015 Ford Mustang rely on increasingly complex systems that don’t always fail in obvious ways. A stuck throttle, steering issue or hidden brake defect might not be visible at the scene. If no mechanic with crash investigation experience examined the vehicle, key mechanical clues could already be gone. It's worth asking: did anyone even consider this angle?
Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected? Modern cars often carry their own version of a black box: recording speed, braking and steering before a crash. Phone data, GPS records and traffic cameras may also tell part of the story. But this kind of digital evidence doesn’t collect itself. It takes effort, coordination and a sense of urgency to secure it before it disappears. Was that done here?
When serious injuries are involved, it’s not enough to assume what happened. There’s always more beneath the surface, but only if someone’s willing to dig. Crashes don’t explain themselves. The truth is in the details, if anyone bothers to look.
Key Takeaways:
- A full crash investigation needs more than just a quick scene review.
- Hidden vehicle problems can cause serious crashes and must be ruled out.
- Car computers and digital data often hold the clearest picture of what happened.

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