Houston

FM 1960 Fender-Bender Ends With Driver Hauled In On Nine Warrants

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Published on February 23, 2026
FM 1960 Fender-Bender Ends With Driver Hauled In On Nine WarrantsSource: Google Street View

A routine Sunday crash on the 1500 block of FM 1960 ended with a trip to jail, after Harris County Precinct 4 deputies discovered the driver had a stack of unresolved traffic business waiting for him, officials say.

Deputies took the adult male into custody at the scene without incident and later transported him to the Harris County Jail. Precinct officials say the on-scene crash investigation uncovered nine open traffic warrants tied to the driver.

 

According to a post by Mark Herman, Harris County Constable Precinct 4, Deputy Denson and other deputies responded to the crash in the 1500 block of FM 1960 and detained an adult male at the scene. Herman's update states the man was taken into custody without incident and transported to the Harris County Jail while deputies wrapped up their investigation.

Crash Uncovered Nine Open Warrants

Precinct 4's social feeds have spotlighted similar warrant arrests along this same stretch of FM 1960. Earlier this month, Cuffed On FM 1960 detailed another case near the 2500 block, where what started as a crash investigation also ended with a wanted suspect in custody. That item noted officials did not list the specific alleged offenses tied to those warrants and urged readers to rely on official channels for verified follow-up.

What Deputies Found

In this latest incident, a post by Mark Herman states that deputies discovered the driver had nine open traffic warrants during their crash investigation. Herman reported that the arrest was made "without incident." The suspect was not publicly identified, and the post did not spell out the underlying charges. Court records were not immediately available.

FM 1960's History Of High-Speed Incidents

FM 1960 is a busy and sometimes volatile corridor in north Harris County, with a track record of high-speed pursuits and wrong-way wrecks. A KTRK/ABC13 report recounted a 120 mph chase that ended in a wrong-way, head-on collision, highlighting how quickly trouble can escalate along the roadway. That history helps explain why deputies say routine traffic stops and crash investigations can suddenly evolve into warrant arrests or more serious criminal cases.

Precinct 4 has urged residents to follow its social feeds for live alerts and to use the C4 NOW app for real-time notices. For now, the constable's Facebook post remains the primary public account of the arrest; additional booking and charge details may surface later through court dockets or sheriff's online records.