Illegal Alien Trucker Kills Indiana National Guardsman in Multi-Vehicle Crash
An Indiana community is reeling after a deadly multi-vehicle crash
in Boone County involving an illegal alien operating a commercial semi-truck
on a New York–issued commercial driver’s license.
Authorities identified the driver as 56-year-old Goderdzi Gujabidze, a Georgian national who was unlawfully present in the United States. According to investigators, Gujabidze was behind the wheel of an 18-wheeler when he collided with a military Humvee and another civilian vehicle, killing an Indiana National Guardsman on active duty transport. The violent impact left the Humvee crushed and scattered debris across the roadway, prompting a major emergency response.
What has shocked many is not only the severity of the crash but the fact that Gujabidze held a valid New York commercial driver’s license despite being in the country illegally. This has raised serious questions about how states verify immigration status for CDL applicants, the effectiveness of federal oversight, and the risks posed when commercial trucking is opened to individuals without lawful presence or proper vetting. For families of service members, the tragedy hits especially hard: a Guardsman who had dedicated his life to public service was killed on American soil by someone who should not have been operating heavy machinery on U.S. roads at all.
Local officials say Gujabidze has been taken into custody and is expected to face multiple charges, including operating a commercial vehicle without lawful status and causing a fatal crash. The investigation remains ongoing, but the incident has already ignited debate about border security, interstate licensing regulations, and accountability within the commercial trucking industry. For many, this case highlights a larger concern: when policy gaps allow unvetted drivers into high-risk positions on public roads, the consequences fall on innocent Americans who are simply doing their jobs or driving home to their families.
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@1TheBrutalTruth1 Nov. 2025 Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976: Allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education, and research.

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