Horror details after 22-year-old student was ‘almost split in two’ by hit-and-run driver as her mother demanded justice

A MOTHER is demanding justice after her daughter was hit and almost split in two by a hit-and-run driver.
Promise McCree hit a barrier while driving early Labor Day morning, the Dallas County Sheriff’s Office said.
As she got out of her car, McCree was struck by another driver, a local ABC affiliate WFAA reported.
The person stopped to help, but a second driver ran over the lower half of McCree’s body and drove away, police said.
“I want justice, she doesn’t deserve this,” McCree’s mother, LuJuana, told the outlet through tears.
She described the terrible pain her daughter is suffering because the driver has not yet been caught.


“She’s moaning, crying, her eyes are just red and they just go up,” her mother said.
“I think, oh God, I just feel it all in my mind, you know. When she got to the emergency room she was almost in two pieces.”
According to her mother, McCree has rods in her legs and pins in her waist and suffers from multiple fractures and fractures.
She has a long way to go but was only able to stand up for the first time on Monday.
However, doctors are not sure whether she can walk in them Future.
McCree has had four surgeries so far, but doctors expect she will need up to 10 surgeries.
At the time of the crash, McCree was finishing her master’s degree in criminology at Grambling State University.
LuJuana said that she has already forgiven the person who did this to her daughter, but she has to face up.
“That you hit her and don’t stop? As if she were nothing?” the mother cried.
“I just want you to come and tell her you’re sorry. This is all I want.”
“I want you to tell me you’re sorry and look at what you did.”
The DCSO is searching for the driver responsible but has very few leads at this time.
All they can say at this point is that the driver was in a black SUV.
The first driver who hit McCree and stayed to help will not face charges.
In the meantime, LuJuana is asking anyone with information to come forward.


“I know if it were your child you would want justice,” she said.
“I’m just a parent who wants the same thing.”