A year after a devastating crash on Interstate 45 in Montgomery County, Texas, court documents are finally painting a fuller — and frankly jaw-dropping — picture of what was happening inside that pickup truck just before it slammed into a van carrying a family of seven.
Spoiler: it wasn’t great.
In March 2025, a white Chevy pickup truck driven by Gage Maddox plowed into a van that had pulled over to the inside shoulder of I-45 North near Briar Rock Road after suffering a flat tire. Three people from the van — Marclino Isaac Tziquin Cuy, Manuel Tulul, and Irma Maria Ajqui Tzep — were killed at the scene. Four others, including an 11-year-old child, were hospitalized.
It was a tragedy that shook the community. Then the court documents arrived.
Let’s Talk About What Maddox Was Actually Doing
Image Credit: Tero Vesalainen / Shutterstock.
According to those documents, Maddox was cruising southbound in the HOV lane — alone. Just him. One guy. In a lane legally meant for vehicles carrying multiple occupants. That’s strike one.
He was also traveling 15 miles per hour over the speed limit. Strike two.
And then there’s the phone. Court records indicate that at the time of the crash, Maddox had been using TikTok and browsing Safari on his cell phone. Because apparently the open road wasn’t entertaining enough.
Maddox told investigators that he saw a truck in front of him swerve, couldn’t react in time, and spotted flashing lights just before impact. That account, however, now sits alongside evidence of speeding, illegal lane use, and active phone browsing — which puts the “I didn’t see it coming” narrative in some uncomfortable company.
The Charges
Maddox has been charged with three counts of manslaughter. Whether he’s been released on bond remains unclear, as the county’s inmate roster system was listed as under maintenance at the time of reporting. (Relatable, honestly — government websites are always down when you need them most.)
This case is a grim reminder of something traffic safety advocates have been screaming into the void for years: distracted driving kills. Not “might inconvenience.” Not “could lead to a fender bender.” Kills.
Three families are now permanently changed because someone decided that a TikTok scroll was worth glancing at while doing 80-something miles per hour. The van’s occupants weren’t doing anything wrong — they had a flat tire and pulled over. They did everything right.
For the car enthusiasts out there who love to talk about reaction time, vehicle dynamics, and the thrill of pushing speed limits just a little — this is what that math looks like when it goes wrong. No amount of horsepower talk makes up for a 15 mph buffer you didn’t leave yourself, or the half-second you lost looking at your phone.
The case is ongoing.