An earlier version of this article incorrectly named Jet Cargo Express in connection with this incident.
Most truck crash investigations involve three or maybe four sources of information before the puzzle is complete. It takes just a couple of hours. But this one, this is different. This case is anything but typical.
Chameleon carriers and shady operations aren’t new. To those who know the signs, they’re easy to spot. But HOPE TRANS LLC isn’t just another bad actor. It’s the most elaborate and deceptive operation uncovered so far.
The FMCSA database fails throughout this investigation. Disjointed records and unverified, user-submitted data obscure the truth, derail investigative efforts, and mislead national media. While the spotlight remains locked on the driver, others responsible for the incident vanish into the background.
Unexamined and untouched.
With that said, Secretary Sean Duffy has confirmed that a federal investigation is underway into this tragic incident.
Here's everything thus far...
The Horrific Crash
On Saturday, June 28, 2025, Alexis Osmani Gonzalez-Companioni fell asleep at the wheel in Terrell, Texas, and woke up to a loud bang. That bang? His 80,000 lb semi-truck crashing into four passenger vehicles and two other semis. The sleeping driver killed 5 people and injured several others.
The tragic incident occurred around 2:40 p.m. in the westbound lanes of the I-20 and forced the highway to close for several hours. The Terrell Volunteer Fire Department described the crash as “horrific” and declared it a “mass casualty” event.
The victims were identified as Zabar McKellar, 52; Krishaun McKellar, 45; Kason McKellar, 16; Billy McKellar, 79; and Nicole Gregory, 49.
20-year-old Evan McKellar is the sole survivor from the Ford F-150. She is in the ICU fighting for her life. Her parents, grandfather, and little brother died in the tragic accident.
Alexis Osmani González-Companioni was initially charged with five counts of involuntary manslaughter and one count of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, confirmed the Texas Department of Public Safety.
The Kaufman County Sheriff’s Office added three more counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon on July 1, according to jail records, bringing the total to nine criminal charges.
He is being held in the Kaufman County Jail on a $2.25 million bond.
This was a postal load, scheduled to run from Palmetto, Georgia to Avondale, Arizona. This trip is approximately 1,856 miles. The United States Postal Service statement of work requires a team load for any trip greater than 500 miles.
González-Companioni never should have been on this trip alone!
According to a former driver for Hope Trans LLC, the company has a reputation for altering shipment documents and manipulating driver ELDs (electronic logging devices) to avoid hitting the federal 11-hour driving limit.
If true, this isn’t just a violation of DOT regulations. It’s violation of the USPS requirements and a deliberate act that puts drivers and the public at serious risk.
Update: According to the police report shared by SarahisCensored, it appears there was absolutely no co-driver on this trip. There are 100s of self-certified ELDs that allow illegal editing and 'ghost drivers.' These illegal ELD providers, and the trucking companies using them, are putting millions of lives at risk!
The Driver: Alexis Osmani González-Companioni. From energy-saving app to truck driver.
Alexis Osmani González-Companioni entered the United States in 2020 on a 90-day ESTA visa, granted through his Spanish citizenship. He arrived in Miami with plans to pitch an energy-saving app. But instead, he ended up behind the wheel of a semi-truck.
Before emigrating to Spain and then the U.S., González-Companioni held a prominent role in Cuba’s political structure. He served as president of the University Student Federation (FEU) at the Central University of Las Villas’ Electrical Engineering faculty and was elected to the Provincial Committee of the Young Communist League (UJC) in Villa Clara. His affiliations marked him as a rising figure in the Cuban regime.
In 2019, Twitter suspended Alexis Osmani González-Companioni’s account for spamming pro-Castro hashtags like #SomosCuba and #SomosContinuidad.
Although he entered the U.S. under the ESTA visa waiver program, which explicitly bars long-term stays, he settled in Miami and never returned to Cuba. According to Cubans Around the World, U.S. law (8 U.S. Code § 1182) deems foreign communist party members inadmissible, along with anyone who lies to obtain visas or immigration benefits.
Whether González-Companioni ever regularized his immigration status or legally obtained a commercial driver’s license remains unclear.
A GoFundMe has since been launched on his behalf, claiming he is having a really hard time.
According to a Facebook post, Alexis reportedly doesn't want the money.
The GoFundMe, however, remains live.
The Trucking Company: HOPE TRANS LLC
Thanks to Freight X, a photo surfaced showing the truck’s USDOT number, confirming that González-Companioni was driving for Hope Trans LLC at the time of the crash.
On the day of the crash, the listed primary officer/contact for the company was Aishat Magomedova. Before her LinkedIn profile vanished, it identified her as the CEO of Fiorito Trucking. The account disappeared within hours of the incident.
But that wasn’t the only thing that changed with this trucking company, or any of the others that will follow.
On June 2, 2025, four days after the crash, the U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) record for Hope Trans LLC was updated. And the changes were significant:
Primary Officer changed from Aishat Magomedova to Todd August
Email changed from aisha@hopetransllc.com to dispatch@hopetransllc.com
Physical Address moved from Tacoma, WA (a shared workspace) to Orlando, FL (apartment complex)
Truck Count dropped from 193 to 65
Driver Count dropped from 195 to 80
In short: a cross-country move and a dramatic reduction in equipment and drivers.
The original address in Washington? A co-working space that you can rent month-to-month. These are fine for mail, but it was also listed as their physical address. So where were the 193 trucks? Where were they parked?
The newly listed Florida address raises just as many red flags. It's an apartment complex. Even with the updated fleet count of 65 trucks, there’s nowhere to store that volume. That’s a pond, not a parking lot. And trucks don’t float.
Carrier red flag: When a trucking company uses an apartment, a P.O. box, or a shared office as their physical base of operations, it raises serious questions. Do they actually work in the shared space or apartment? Where are all the trucks?
Let us continue.
Driver reviews for Hope Trans LLC are overwhelmingly negative. To be fair, negative reviews are common across the trucking industry. Long hours, tight schedules, and dispatch issues often lead to frustration.
But this case is different. This isn’t just a complaint about late pay or poor communication. The driver reviews reference the company pushing driver past their legal hours of service.
Five people lost their lives because one driver fell asleep.
That demands a closer look. Not just at the driver, but at the company behind him. Or companies. Plural.
HOPE TRANS LLC has a Facebook business page, with a listed address in Florida. The page was created on June 20, 2024. The email address on the page offers another clue: it includes the name ‘beezone',’ which is tied to a related trucking company, Bee Zone Logistics (USDOT 3191514).
This connection suggests that HOPE TRANS LLC isn’t operating in isolation. It’s part of a larger web of companies, linked by shared addresses, email domains, and patterns of behavior that deserve serious scrutiny.
Bee Zone Logistics
When a commercial truck is inspected by authorities, the vehicle identification number (VIN) is recorded. That VIN acts like a fingerprint, it tells us exactly which truck was involved. By analyzing inspection data, it's possible to track whether the same truck is being used across multiple companies.
In the case of Hope Trans LLC and Bee Zone Logistics, 88 trucks share the exact same VINs.
That’s not a coincidence. It suggests the same fleet of trucks has operated under two different company names. This common tactic used by carriers trying to avoid scrutiny, insurance issues, or regulatory penalties.
In fraudulent or high-risk trucking operations, there’s often a telltale sign: overlapping company lifespans. As one company shuts down, voluntarily or due to violations, a new one quietly takes its place, often with the same assets, people, and practices.
Bee Zone Logistics operated from September 24, 2018, to December 16, 2024. Over time, the listed company officers changed multiple times, cycling through:
Sarvar Muradov
Mariya Shavrova
‘Sam’ Muradov
Patina Magomedova
This pattern, frequent officer changes, overlapping operation timelines, and VIN-sharing with other USDOTs, raises serious concerns about continuity, accountability, and the potential for fraudulent practices designed to evade federal oversight.
Hope Trans LLC was registered on January 24, 2021, while Beezone Logistics was still active. However, ownership records suggest that Hope Trans LLC was originally registered by Mavinder Singh, but was likely sold to Aishat Magomedova sometime in 2023.
If you already operate one trucking company, why would you need another?
And if you’re managing two, what’s the purpose of a third?
This brings us to Kardan Trucking.
Kardan Trucking
The primary contact for Kardan Trucking is listed as Naida Magomedova. But that wasn’t always the case. Previously, the contact was Sarvar Muradov. The same name associated with Bee Zone Logistics, one of the companies sharing trucks and timelines with Hope Trans LLC.
Although Kardan Trucking was established in 2017, changes in its USDOT registration suggest it may have been sold to Sarvar Muradov around 2020.
Inspection records show that:
Hope Trans LLC and Kardan Trucking share 50+ trucks
Beezone Logistics and Kardan Trucking share 100+ trucks
And as previously noted, Hope Trans LLC and Beezone Logistics share 88 trucks
So, what is happening? Why are they doing this?
It’s a tactic known in the industry as a chameleon carrier. When a trucking company shuts down or gets flagged for safety violations, unpaid claims, or regulatory issues, and then re-emerges under a new name to keep operating.
Same trucks. Same people. Same problems. Just a different company on paper.
By cycling through company names, they reset their safety scores, avoid insurance hikes, confuse regulators, and escape accountability. It’s not just a loophole. It’s a strategy. And one that puts the public at risk every time these trucks get back on the road.
Let’s look at some of the incidents and violations tied to Kardan Trucking.
December 9, 2024: Alain Hernandez Rodriguez of Florida was driving westbound on I-80 when he lost control.
A Cuban truck driver was killed Friday morning when his semi, owned by Kardan Trucking of Bluffton, Indiana, overturned on Interstate 80 in Iowa.
According to the Iowa State Patrol, the crash occurred at 9:36 a.m. near mile marker 28. The Freightliner tractor-trailer, driven by Alain Hernández Rodríguez, 42, of West Palm Beach, Florida, veered into the median, struck a light pole, and rolled onto its side.
Hernández Rodríguez was pronounced dead at the scene.
A passenger in the truck, José Armando Valdez, 23, also Cuban and a resident of Miami, was injured and transported to CHI Health Mercy Hospital for treatment.
Local press reports indicate that the truck overturned while entering the highway, and neither occupant was wearing a seat belt at the time of the crash.
Hernández Rodríguez’s wife and young son are reportedly in Guyana, waiting for a visa to travel to the United States in the wake of his death.
January 8, 2023: Fairfield man and Texas man killed in 16-vehicle crash on I-80.
A Fairfield man and a Houston, Texas man were killed in a multi-vehicle crash early Sunday morning on Interstate 80 near the Dodge Street exit in Iowa City.
According to the Iowa State Patrol, the crash occurred around 5:30 a.m. on an ice-covered stretch of highway and involved 16 vehicles. The scene blocked traffic for several hours. A report released Monday identified the victims as David Mosinski, 57, of Fairfield, and Junier Caballero-Verneo, 37, of Houston.
The incident began when a semi-truck, owned by Kardan Trucking, driven by Johan Caballero-Vereno, also of Houston, lost control on the icy road, jackknifed, and blocked all three lanes. That triggered a chain reaction of crashes.
Mosinski, who was driving a truck, collided with the semi’s trailer and died at the scene.
Junier Caballero-Verneo, a passenger in the semi, exited the vehicle after the crash and was struck and killed.
It would be easier to say this is where it ends.
But it does not end here.
It keeps going.
Just like the Kardan Trucking —> Bee Zone Logistics —> Hope Trans LLC trucks.
Untangling this web of operations is going to take time and minds that truly know the transportation industry. This behavior is not new, but it can be incredibly confusing.
Unanswered Questions
Is Aishat Magomedova a real person?
While it’s unclear whether this individual even exists, one thing is certain: she’s directly connected to Sarvar Murdova, the former primary contact for Bee Zone Logistics and Kardan Trucking. The two jointly sold a $1.6 million condo in Florida.
How did this carrier get this postal load?
The United States Postal Service claims to enforce strict standards for carriers hauling its freight. So how did this one slip through?
This is what happens when chameleon carriers are allowed to operate unchecked.
In this case, five lives were lost because one deceptive network slipped through the cracks.
What the media gets wrong.
The autonomous truck narrative.
AUTONOMOUS TRUCKS ARE NOT THE ANSWER!
We’re nowhere close to making them a real, scalable solution. And pretending otherwise is lazy reporting. The real solution isn’t theoretical tech. It’s accountability.
Dangerous operations like this one are allowed to thrive because people ignore what actually matters.
Instead of following this web of deceptive operations, we turn to ‘AUTOMATE IT!’
It’s a distraction. A headline. It is NOT a solution.
Sleep. Call it what it is!
The driver FELL ASLEEP. Yes, he failed to see stalled traffic. But not because he was distracted by his phone. He wasn’t watching YouTube videos or reaching for something across the cab. He was exhausted, and he fell asleep.
Too much focus on the driver.
When we focus solely on the driver, whether his jail booking, nationality, or ability to speak English, we lose sight of the greater issue.
Those details may matter, but they’re not the heart of the issue. The real scrutiny belongs on the company (or companies) hiring these drivers. And it belongs on the regulatory parties that allow companies like this one to reincarnate over and over again, despite being dangerous.
If the conversation ends with this one carrier or this driver, nothing changes.
Typo in the beginning. Will fix soon. JUNE 28, not July.