Updated at 3:40 p.m.: Revised to include details from the arrest warrant affidavit.

A 26-year-old woman has been arrested in a hit-and-run that killed a Deep Ellum bartender last month.

Jessica Pratt was booked Monday into the Dallas County Jail. She was charged with accident involving death. Her bail was set at $15,000.

Jessica Pratt

Ian Brooks was on his way home from work May 19 when his motorcycle was struck from behind on U.S. Highway 75, near Walnut Hill Lane, in Northeast Dallas.

He was thrown from the bike and died, police said.

About an hour after the crash, Pratt drove back to the scene and told officers that she might have run over a dead body in the road, according to an arrest warrant affidavit.

Pratt said she saw a motorcycle on the ground and vehicles in front of her swerved to avoid it, but she hit something. She said she left to go tell her work what happened and that she needed to go back to speak with police.

"It wasn't my wreck, so it wasn't like I was leaving the scene," Pratt told a detective.

The detective noticed black marks on the front license plate of Pratt's vehicle that were consistent with hitting the rear tire of a motorcycle and blood and a large clump of hair stuck to the undercarriage of her vehicle, the affidavit stated.

A woman who had been in the car with Pratt later told police that she was looking at Facebook on her phone while Pratt was speeding to work and that Pratt was smoking PCP and was high on cocaine and marijuana, according to court documents.

Pratt then reportedly remarked "look a motorcycle" before striking it. After running over two bumps, Pratt told the passenger, "We hit a dead body, fool," the affidavit stated.

Pratt kept driving to work despite her passenger saying they had to turn around. The witness told police that Pratt called an attorney the day after the crash to try to collect money from it, according to the affidavit.

When Pratt later spoke to police, she changed parts of her story and again said the man had been dead in the road and that she couldn't stop or she would have been rear-ended, the affidavit stated.

But evidence at the scene, including how far the motorcycle and Brooks' body were from the point of impact, suggested otherwise.

Brooks was the general manager at Brick and Bones, where he started as a barback.

He was remembered as someone who never forgot a face or a name.

Staff writer Tasha Tsiaperas contributed to this report.