A severe road traffic accident occurred in the state of Indiana, claiming the lives of four people. The accident, according to industry and news media, was caused by a truck driven by a Kyrgyz citizen and once again exposed systemic problems in the American freight industry — particularly the activities of so-called 'chameleon carriers'.
The accident happened on State Road 67 in Jay County. A truck collided at high speed with a stopped traffic flow. As a result, four men from the Amish community traveling in a horse-drawn carriage were killed.
According to an industry publication FreightWaves, the truck was driven by Bekzhan Beyshekeev, a driver residing in the USA and a citizen of Kyrgyzstan. This information appears in early reports, while the official investigation is still ongoing.
"This accident once again demonstrates how dangerous 'chameleon carrier' networks remain, capable of bypassing oversight mechanisms for years," notes the FreightWaves article published in February 2026.
Although public attention is focused on the driver's identity — a Kyrgyz citizen, experts emphasize that the key issue is not national but structural. It concerns carrier companies that close after violations and reopen under a different name, maintaining actual operational activities.
Such 'chameleon carriers':
- evade responsibility for accidents and violations;
- avoid regulator inspections;
- continue to exploit drivers and equipment with poor safety records.
Indiana State Police confirmed the death of four people and reported that technical and procedural examinations are ongoing. Official accident reports are published through the Indiana State Police portal, but final conclusions on the case have not yet been disclosed.

