An Oklahoma Highway Patrol trooper, a 36-year-old woman, and a 4-year-old child are dead after a vehicle crossed the center cable barrier on Interstate 35 in Oklahoma City and slammed head-on into the trooper's northbound patrol unit Wednesday morning. Investigators are now asking the public to help identify a truck that may hold answers about what triggered the chain of events.
The crash happened just before 11:30 a.m. on April 8, on I-35 just south of Hefner Road. The Oklahoma Highway Patrol identified the trooper as Vernon Brake, a veteran of the agency who graduated from the OHP Academy in 2006. The other driver was identified as Mercedes Bayne, 36. A 4-year-old passenger in Bayne's vehicle, whose name has not been released, was also killed. All three were pronounced dead at the scene.
Brake worked primarily in commercial motor vehicle enforcement with Troop S. He spent nearly two decades protecting Oklahoma's roads. Now his wife and two children must carry on without him.
What investigators believe happened on I-35
The Oklahoma Highway Patrol said a vehicle traveling southbound on I-35 lost control and crossed the center cable barrier, the steel-rope divider designed to prevent exactly this kind of crossover collision. The vehicle struck Brake's northbound unit in what amounted to a head-on impact at highway speed.
OHP investigators believe Bayne was forced to take evasive action to avoid either debris, equipment, or vehicles that had stopped ahead of her. That sudden maneuver apparently sent her car across the median and into oncoming traffic.
The critical unanswered question is what created the hazard Bayne was trying to avoid. OHP's Traffic Homicide Unit shared a photo on the agency's Facebook page showing a truck that stopped on I-35 near the crash scene. Investigators believe the truck may have lost part of its load or stopped to assist in clearing debris, but they have not confirmed either possibility.
Anyone with information about the truck, or anyone who witnessed conditions on that stretch of I-35 before the crash, is asked to call the Oklahoma Highway Patrol Communications Center at 405-425-2323.
A trooper's service cut short
Vernon Brake gave nearly two decades to the Oklahoma Highway Patrol. His assignment with Troop S, commercial vehicle enforcement, put him on the state's busiest corridors day after day, inspecting rigs and keeping freight traffic in compliance. It is the kind of unglamorous, essential work that rarely makes headlines until something goes terribly wrong.
The OHP posted a statement on social media mourning Brake's loss:
"Brake is survived by his wife and two children. Our prayers and deepest sympathies are with his family as well as the family of the other driver involved."
That brief statement also acknowledged the Bayne family's grief, a reminder that this crash left two families shattered, not one. A young mother and a 4-year-old child also lost their lives in a matter of seconds on an Oklahoma interstate.
Line-of-duty deaths on American highways
Traffic crashes remain one of the leading causes of line-of-duty deaths for law enforcement officers across the country. Troopers and deputies who spend their shifts on high-speed interstates face risks that most commuters never think about, disabled vehicles, debris fields, distracted drivers, and the ever-present danger of a crossover collision.
The hazards are not limited to Oklahoma. In Connecticut, 49-year-old state trooper Kevin Miller was killed on March 29 when his cruiser rear-ended a tractor-trailer on Interstate 84 in Tolland. Authorities said the truck was in the right lane going up a hill and traveling slower than other traffic. The Connecticut State Police Union created the Kevin Miller Memorial Fund to help his ex-wife and their two children, ages 13 and 10. His funeral was held in East Hartford.
In both cases, the officers were doing exactly what the public expects, patrolling highways, enforcing the law, keeping traffic moving safely. And in both cases, the road itself became the threat.
Incidents involving fatal vehicle collisions that kill law enforcement officers have drawn renewed attention to the dangers frontline responders face on American roads every shift.
Unanswered questions about the truck
The OHP's decision to publicize the truck photo signals that investigators regard it as a meaningful lead. If the truck shed cargo or equipment onto I-35, its operator may bear responsibility for creating the road hazard that set the fatal chain in motion. If it merely stopped to help clear existing debris, its driver could be a key witness.
Neither scenario has been confirmed. The agency has not released a description, license plate number, or other identifying details beyond the Facebook photo. That makes public tips essential.
Serious highway crashes often hinge on conditions that existed seconds before impact, a tire tread in the travel lane, a piece of unsecured freight, a sudden slowdown. Reconstructing those conditions after the fact is painstaking work. The Traffic Homicide Unit will need every piece of evidence it can gather.
Crash investigations on busy interstates can be complicated further when witnesses drive past without stopping. In a separate interstate incident in Utah, a trooper's encounter with a driver who rear-ended a patrol car on I-15 escalated into a fatal confrontation, a reminder that every stop and every collision on a high-speed corridor carries unpredictable risk.
The cost borne by families
Vernon Brake's wife and two children now join the ranks of law enforcement families who lost a husband and father not to a gunfight or a pursuit, but to a highway crash during a routine shift. Mercedes Bayne's family lost a mother and a 4-year-old child in the same instant.
Emergency responders who arrive at scenes like these, and the officers who risk their own safety pulling victims from wrecked vehicles, carry those images for years. The toll extends far beyond the families named in the reports.
The OHP has not announced whether road closures, citations, or additional investigative findings have followed the crash. For now, the agency is focused on identifying the truck and piecing together the seconds before impact.
Anyone who traveled that stretch of I-35 near Hefner Road on Wednesday morning should consider whether they saw anything, a truck shedding cargo, vehicles braking hard, debris in the lanes. A phone call to 405-425-2323 could make the difference between answers and an open case.
Cable barriers, commercial vehicle inspections, speed enforcement, these are the mundane tools society uses to keep interstate highways from becoming killing fields. When those tools fail, or when a single piece of unsecured cargo defeats all of them, the people who pay the price are the drivers and officers sharing the road at the wrong moment.
Three people are dead on an Oklahoma highway. The least the rest of us can do is help investigators find out why.

