Henry Watson Jr., Harris Holden, 1 Injured in Pedestrian vs. Car Accident in Allen, TX
Collin County, TX — July 20, 2025, Henry Watson Jr., Harris Holden, and another pedestrian were injured in a car accident at 12:30 a.m. on U.S. Highway 75.
According to authorities, 34-year-old Henry Watson Jr., 25-year-old Harris Holden, and a 34-year-old man were on foot outside of their vehicles due to a previous crash on southbound U.S. 75 in the vicinity of Exchange Parkway when the accident took place.

Officials indicate that, for as yet unknown reasons, a southbound Toyota Tundra pickup truck collided with the pedestrians and their vehicles. All three people who had been on foot reportedly sustained serious injuries as a result of the crash. Additional details pertaining to this incident are not available at this point in time. The investigation is currently ongoing.
Commentary
Crashes involving pedestrians on the highway are among the most devastating and most complex to untangle. When people are already outside their vehicles due to an earlier incident, the margin for error is nearly nonexistent—which makes it all the more important that investigators examine every angle of how and why another vehicle struck them.
Did the authorities thoroughly investigate the crash?
It isn’t enough to say a pickup collided with pedestrians. Investigators should be reconstructing the Toyota Tundra’s speed, path, and the driver’s actions leading up to the impact. Did the driver attempt to brake or steer away? Was there evidence of inattention, fatigue, or impairment? In a situation with multiple vehicles and people already at the roadside, a rushed or surface-level investigation leaves too many unanswered questions.
Has anyone looked into the possibility that a vehicle defect caused the crash?
While driver error often comes to mind first, it’s worth considering whether the truck itself contributed to the collision. A brake malfunction, steering failure, or tire problem could all prevent a driver from avoiding pedestrians in time. Modern vehicles also come equipped with forward-collision warnings and automatic braking systems designed to help prevent precisely this type of event. If those systems didn’t activate, the vehicle deserves a closer look. Without a thorough inspection, these possibilities go unexplored.
Has all the electronic data relating to the crash been collected?
The Tundra’s event data recorder could provide critical insight into speed, braking, and steering inputs just before impact. Beyond the vehicle itself, nearby traffic or surveillance cameras might have captured the crash, while phone records could reveal whether the driver was distracted at the worst possible moment. If investigators haven’t pulled that evidence, then they may be left with an incomplete version of the story.
Highway crashes like this show how quickly a dangerous situation can turn catastrophic. That’s why every piece of evidence matters—because only with a full picture can we move beyond speculation and toward real understanding.
Key Takeaways:
- Multi-pedestrian highway crashes demand full reconstruction of the driver’s actions.
- Mechanical failures or non-functioning safety systems in the truck must be ruled out.
- Vehicle data, cameras, and phone records are critical to clarifying how the crash happened.
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