Driver Who Killed Dixie Chicks Founding Member Sentenced to 15 Years

Founding member of The Dixie Chicks and well-regarded bass player Laura Lynch died in a car accident in Texas on December 22nd, 2023. Lynch founded The Dixie Chicks with multi-instrumentalist sisters Martie and Emily Erwin, and guitarist Robin Lynn Macy in 1989 as a bluegrass and traditional country band. She was 65 years old.
Laura Lynch was killed in a head on collision near Dell City, TX, just east of El Paso in Hudspeth County. Lynch was heading east on Highway 62 when another vehicle heading westbound was trying to pass another vehicle on the two-lane highway. The westbound vehicle did not clear the lane in time, hitting the car of Lynch. She was pronounced dead on the scene.
Now the driver, 33 year old Domenick Chavez has been sentenced to 15 years in prison for Laura Lynch’s death. According to the El Paso Country District Attorney, Chavez had attempted to pass four vehicles on the two-way highway when he collided head-on with Lynch’s car going the opposite direction. He was traveling between 106 and 114 miles per hour.
Chavez was not seriously injured in the accident. As opposed to going to trial, Chavez agreed to a plea deal. As part of the deal, Chavez admits he was driving recklessly when the accident happened. Alcohol was not a factor in the crash, authorities say. But Chavez’s was driving on a suspended license due to two previous DWI convictions when the accident occurred.
“The death of Ms. Lynch caused profound sadness for her family, the Dell City community, and all those who appreciated her music,” said District Attorney James Montoya announcing the plea deal. “It is a loss made more acute by the fact that it happened just days before Christmas. Our office will continue to hold accountable those defendants who choose to drive in an extremely dangerous manner.”
Lynch was also a lead vocalist in The Dixie Chicks, and co-wrote multiple songs for the band, including “I’m Falling Again” and “Pink Toenails.” Lynch appears on the band’s first three albums, Thank Heavens for Dale Evans (1990), Little Ol’ Cowgirl (1992), and Shouldn’t a Told You That (1993). She left the band in 1995 as the group began pursuing a more contemporary sound with new member Natalie Maines. The Dixie Chicks officially changed their name to “The Chicks” in 2020.
“We hold a special place in our hearts for the time we spent playing music, laughing and traveling together. Laura was a bright light,” The Chicks said upon her passing. “Her infectious energy and humor gave a spark to the early days of our band. Laura had a gift for design, a love of all things Texas and was instrumental in the early success of the band.“
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February 25, 2026 @ 8:40 pm
Plus another fifteen on parole listening to Chris Gaines Greatest Hits
February 25, 2026 @ 8:51 pm
She also had an issue with her hearing. She did an interview with Cmt I believe it was many years ago for a special. I don’t 100% exactly remember the circumstances of it just know it was an issue. It may have only shown itself with bigger venues as the star power or direction of the band started to rise. Someone may even chime in that knows can explain it better than me most likely.
Sorry to hear this and glad justice was served.
February 25, 2026 @ 9:10 pm
So here’s an article about a man who is sentenced to prison for killed a woman via reckless driving. And the framing and all of the quotes are (rightly) in sympathy of the victim, who happens to be a person of relevance to this site..
Yet immediately below is an article concerning a man, JD Graham, who less than ten years ago was sentenced to prison for recklessly driving into an killing a motorcyclist while high on synthetic drugs. And the framing and quotes in that article are wholly in sympahthy with the person who committed the crime, and is relevant to this site. [The fact that there was a victim who was killed is literally not even mentioned. I unscovered it via Google.]
Like screenwriters, we pick our protagonist, and other characters are only worthy of the audience’s sympathy if we choose to flesh them out and make them important.
The juxtaposition could not be more perfect!
February 25, 2026 @ 11:21 pm
Luckyoldsun,
I appreciate your instinct to aggressively scrutinize every single thing published to this site. Don’t think for a second that it did not cross my mind that these two stories were being published back to back. In some respects, I wanted to publish them back to back. Though in truth, this is just more of a coincidence that both stories broke at the same time.
However, your implication of, “And the framing and quotes in that article are wholly in sympahthy with the person who committed the crime, and is relevant to this site…” is completely irresponsible, and frankly opportunist and insulting. “This site” did not show “sympathy” to JD Graham for killing someone in a vehicular accident. Nor did it try to hide that fact. This site showed sympathy for someone who almost lost their life a couple of days ago, who previously was involved in a vehicle fatality, was sentenced to five years in prison, and used that opportunity to rehabilitate his life. I believe in forgiveness for everyone, including Domenick Chavez, and I hope he can use his time to rehabilitate, and present a positive story for faith and redemption just like JD Graham does. But they are two souls at two different points in that redemption cycle. That is why their stories were presented differently.
And for the record, I have reported on musicians who have killed people in auto accidents, and the complexities of these matters. Kylie Rae Harris killed someone in a car accident. She also killed herself in the process, paying the ultimate price for her mistake. Connor Smith killed a woman at a crosswalk. Those charges have since been dropped at the behest of the bereaved family. Trying to oversimplify, or conflate these events is unfair to the complexity of these matters.