A major crash on Naomi Street sent emergency crews to the scene just before 5 AM on Friday, June 26. The incident hit at 4:58 AM in a residential area where traffic rarely stops for much of the day—but the crash data tells a different story.
Responding officers found a collision that warranted major classification. The exact lane closures and vehicle count aren't yet detailed in incident reports, but the location itself carries significant weight in the LTA real-time incident database.
Naomi Street has become a frequent crash zone. According to LocalTrafficAccidents.com data, the corridor logged 40 total incidents over the past 30 days—21 of them major crashes like the one Friday morning. Over the past 90 days, that number climbs to 91 total incidents, with 35 classified as major. In the past year alone, 147 crashes have occurred at this location, 56 of them major.
The timing of Friday's crash is noteworthy because it falls outside the typical commute rush. LTA data shows most crashes here occur outside weekday peak hours; the single busiest hour is 3 to 4 PM, when eight crashes have been recorded over the analysis period. Saturdays have emerged as the highest-incident day at this location, with 19 crashes in the past 90 days. A pre-dawn Friday morning wreck is less typical for Naomi Street, though far from unprecedented given the corridor's overall incident frequency.
State crash records add broader context. According to TxDOT CRIS public crash records dating back to January 2020, the corridor—within roughly a quarter-mile of the incident location—has seen 715 crashes in that six-year window, including one fatal. Contributing factors as recorded by the investigating officer, per TxDOT CRIS, show "Failed To Control Speed" as the most common factor, cited in 240 of those crashes. The hit-and-run rate in the corridor stands at 11.4%, with 169 hit-and-runs among 1,483 units involved in reported crashes.
Weather conditions at the time of Friday's crash were mild—broken clouds and 81 degrees—so road conditions weren't a factor in this particular incident.
The crash was cleared, and Naomi Street returned to normal flow. No additional delays are expected in the area at this time.
This report was produced by LTA's editor-designed production system under the executive editorial direction of Dennis R. Mundy, Executive Editor. The system combines our proprietary data pipeline with AI-assisted drafting to deliver verified incident coverage to LTA's editorial standards.