I find it interesting that some here are mad at others because of "rushing to judgment", "assuming" stuff, and "coming to a conclusion," when nothing of the sort actually happened. A question in the form of "just wondered..." was posed, nothing more. Well, except for those who assumed the driver has a family and is supporting them. A question was asked. A question. Someone wondered aloud. OMG! Good grief.
Speculating is another matter, is not jumping to a conclusion or assuming anything, and there's nothing wrong with speculating what may have happened, since speculation makes all of us more aware that it could happen to any of us at any time unless we are vigilant and aware of what we are doing at all times.
"I hope the driver's loved ones don't log in and see the posts that are being made......"
Why? No names have been mentioned, nothing bad has been said about the driver, we don't know a thing about the accident, where it happened or when, or even if it happened at all. Any death is a tragedy, but you can't expect people here to get too maudlin over an anonymous death, even that of an expediter, since most of us know that an average of 115 people die every day on US roads. If we got too worked up over just one of them every day, much less 115 a day, we wouldn't be able to function or do our jobs.
Is that cold and heartless? Of course not, it's life, and life goes on. It will change if and when we get a name, a face, or some other information about the driver that makes him real to us, known to use. That's not the case with Bolt, to be sure, since they know him, and it's probably not the case with many Bolt drivers whether they knew him or not, but for the rest of us, it's just 1 of 115 that we also don't know. Another one of the 115 was Truman Williams, the 75 year old football coach of Bisbee High School, one of the most victorious football coaches in Arizona history, with more than 200 wins under his belt. He died in a one-vehicle accident when his truck veered off state highway 92 and crashed into an embankment. According to his son, the truck was fully loaded with shoulder pads. See what I mean? Though tragic as it is, there's a real guy with a real name and a real verifiable accident that no one here cares about. It's hard to get too worked up over a Bolt driver without a name who no one knows who may or may not have died in a rear end collision with a semi.
At this point, I'm wondering if this "Texas" accident wasn't the one that happened on the Ohio Turnpike last Monday, when a cargo van rear ended a tractor trailer and then erupted into flames, with the coroner having to use a wedding ring and dental record to positively identify the Toledo man.