This browser does not support the Video element.
Hit-&-run driver says he hit deer before turning self in
A driver from Arkansas turned himself in to the Denton County Jail a month after he was involved in a fatal hit-and-run in Lewisville. FOX 4's Peyton Yager has more.
LEWISVILLE, Texas - A suspect turned himself in to the Denton County Jail last week, a month after he was involved in a fatal hit-and-run in Lewisville.
Jostin Paul Low
Fatal hit-and-run in Lewisville
What we know:
On March 14 at approximately 7 a.m., police responded to a call about a man lying on the northbound service road near E I-35 and Arthurs Lane in Lewisville.
Investigators determined 37-year-old Demarcus Gibbs had been struck and killed by a vehicle. Gibbs' wife told police he had been walking back to a hotel after dropping off a rental car.
Police found debris from a vehicle, including a large yellow passenger side mirror, near where Gibbs was found. Through surveillance video, officials tracked the vehicle back to Jostin Paul Low of Bentonville, Arkansas.
Low told investigators he was involved in an accident, but claimed he hit a deer. He told police he circled back after the accident but "didn't see anything," and later sent images of the damage to his truck.
On April 14, Low turned himself in to the Denton County Jail. He was charged with collision involving death. Low has since bonded out of jail.
Witness, family speak on accident
What they're saying:
"I didn't observe any breathing. That's when I called 911."
The witness who found Gibbs is from Shreveport, the same town the victim hailed from. "It's a small world," Dylan Condie told FOX 4's Peyton Yager.
Dylan Condie
Yager also spoke with Gibbs' father, Terrance Trammell, who said his son was "such a good person." He says Gibbs leaves behind two children and another one on the way.
"I think the world is missing a great person now," Trammell said.
Terrance Trammell
Trammell also expressed concerns about how quickly Low bonded out of jail. Low's bond was set at $25,000.
"I'm having difficulty with that because no decent human being would hit somebody and keep going."
The Source: Information in this story comes from the Denton County Sheriff's Office.