Red Light Runner KILLS—ICE Steps In

Two trucks driving on a wet road.

An illegal alien semi-truck driver ran a red light in suburban Indianapolis, killing a 64-year-old man in a preventable tragedy that underscores the deadly consequences of failed immigration enforcement policies.

Story Snapshot

  • Illegal alien semi-truck driver ran red light on U.S. 36 in Avon, Indiana, killing 64-year-old Terry Schulz on February 18, 2026
  • Indiana State Police immediately detained the driver and transferred custody to ICE, following pattern from similar deadly crash weeks earlier
  • Incident marks second fatal crash in Indiana involving illegal alien commercial drivers within two weeks, raising concerns about CDL issuance to non-citizens
  • Witness who narrowly avoided collision prayed over dying victim at scene, highlighting human toll of immigration enforcement failures

Red Light Violation Turns Deadly at Busy Intersection

Terry Schulz was driving his Chevrolet pickup truck northbound through the intersection of U.S. 36 and County Road 525 East in Avon, Hendricks County, around noon on February 18, 2026, when an eastbound Freightliner semi-truck ran a red light and struck his vehicle. The collision’s force caused Schulz’s truck to smash into a westbound Chrysler Sebring in the left turn lane. Schulz was pronounced dead at the scene. The semi-truck driver, whose name remains undisclosed, was identified as an illegal alien and detained by Indiana State Police before being transferred to Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody.

Witness Provides Emotional Account of Final Moments

A witness who narrowly escaped being hit by the semi-truck called 911 and stayed with Schulz as he died, praying over him in his final moments. The witness shared the experience through local media, expressing a desire to connect with Schulz’s family to offer comfort. This human dimension underscores how illegal immigration policies have real victims—hardworking Americans like Schulz who simply had the misfortune of being in the wrong place when someone who shouldn’t have been in the country violated basic traffic laws. The Hendricks County Sheriff’s Office confirmed the three-vehicle crash details, while ISP managed the scene investigation and coordinated with federal immigration authorities.

Pattern Emerges Following Similar Deadly Indiana Crash

This tragedy follows an eerily similar incident just two weeks earlier in Jay County, Indiana, where another illegal alien semi-truck driver caused a head-on collision that killed four people on February 3, 2026. That driver, identified as 30-year-old Beckshan Beesv, had entered the United States through the CBP One app under the Biden administration’s immigration policies and somehow obtained a Pennsylvania commercial driver’s license. Beesv’s semi crossed the centerline on State Road 67, striking an Amish van and killing three occupants instantly, with a fourth dying later. Indiana State Police detained Beesv and handed him to ICE on an immigration matter separate from the crash investigation, establishing a precedent now repeated in the Hendricks County case.

CDL Issuance to Illegal Aliens Raises Safety Concerns

Both Indiana crashes illuminate a disturbing trend: illegal aliens obtaining commercial driver’s licenses and operating massive vehicles on American highways despite their unlawful presence. The CBP One app, deployed under the previous administration, allowed migrants to schedule entry appointments, creating a pathway that some exploited to gain state-issued credentials without proper vetting. This represents a fundamental breakdown in public safety—states issuing CDLs to individuals whose very presence violates federal law, enabling them to control 80,000-pound vehicles capable of catastrophic damage. The trucking industry now faces intensified scrutiny over immigration status verification in licensing processes, as these incidents demonstrate how lax enforcement translates directly into American lives lost on roads that should be safe.

As of February 18 evening, the semi-truck driver remained in ICE custody while Indiana State Police continued crash reconstruction. No criminal charges have been announced, mirroring the Jay County case where the investigation proceeds separately from immigration enforcement actions. The driver’s identity has not been released publicly. For Schulz’s family and the Avon community, questions linger about how this driver obtained commercial credentials and whether enhanced vetting could have prevented this senseless death. These tragedies fuel ongoing debates about border security, the CBP One app’s legacy, and whether states should issue any licenses to non-citizens—debates that matter because the answers determine whether more American families will receive devastating news like the one delivered to Terry Schulz’s loved ones.

Sources:

Illegal Alien Semi-Truck Driver Runs Red Light, Kills Elderly Man in Indiana – The Gateway Pundit