One teenage girl died and another was left critically injured after a sledding crash in a Frisco neighborhood on Sunday, turning what should have been a rare winter-weather diversion into a tragedy that shook the city. Frisco police said the two girls, both 16, were found with life-threatening injuries near Majestic Gardens Drive and Killian Court after officers and firefighters were called to the area at about 2:26 p.m. Both were taken to local hospitals.
One later died, while the other remained in critical condition. The early facts gave the community a clearer picture than many serious injury crashes usually do, but they also underscored how quickly a recreational activity can become deadly when a motor vehicle is involved. In a city where neighborhood streets are often seen as safer than major thoroughfares, the crash served as a grim reminder that speed, traction and impact forces can turn even a short ride into a life-or-death event.
What police said happened

According to an official statement from the City of Frisco, investigators determined that a 16-year-old boy was driving a Jeep Wrangler while pulling the two girls on a sled. Witnesses told police the sled hit a curb and then struck a tree. It was a sledding incident involving a motor vehicle on icy neighborhood streets during an unusual North Texas winter event. The official release did not identify the teens because they were minors, and police did not publicly state how fast the Jeep was traveling. As a result, any attempt to pin the crash on speed, driver intent or road design alone would go beyond what authorities had confirmed on January 25.
Why this incident drew such intense attention

North Texas does not see many snow events severe enough to make neighborhood sledding common, which helps explain why this case drew immediate attention from local media and residents. Coverage from NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth, KERA and The Dallas Morning News quickly established the broad outline of the tragedy, but the city’s release remained the most important source because it set out the official facts available that day.
What remains unknown
Police did not publicly release the names of the juveniles on January 25, and they did not announce whether any criminal charges were being considered. They also did not release a full reconstruction, a posted speed estimate or any formal explanation of road conditions beyond the fact that the incident took place during a stretch of winter weather that had already disrupted travel around North Texas.
The broader safety lesson

The hardest truth in cases like this is also the simplest one: once a sled is tied to a moving vehicle, the risk changes completely. Federal road-safety agencies have long warned that teens face elevated crash risk because of inexperience, distraction and judgment under changing conditions. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says teen drivers have a higher rate of fatal crashes than older drivers, while the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention notes nighttime driving, teen passengers and risky decision-making all increase danger for drivers ages 16 to 19.
What comes next
Frisco police asked anyone with information about the incident to contact the department or submit an anonymous tip through Tip411 in the city’s statement. Additional records may eventually become available through Texas crash-report channels, including the Texas Department of Transportation, though those documents often lag behind the first public release and can omit or redact certain details while an investigation is active. For now, the known facts are enough to frame the scale of the loss. A winter afternoon in a Frisco neighborhood ended with two teenagers fighting for their lives, one of them fatally.






