Updated
Updated · TechCrunch · Jun 24
NTSB Probes Tesla Crash That Killed 76-Year-Old Katy Resident as Family Sues Driver, Automaker
Updated
Updated · TechCrunch · Jun 24

NTSB Probes Tesla Crash That Killed 76-Year-Old Katy Resident as Family Sues Driver, Automaker

3 articles · Updated · TechCrunch · Jun 24

Summary

  • A weekend Tesla crash in Katy, Texas, that killed 76-year-old Martha Avila after a car slammed into her home is now under National Transportation Safety Board investigation.
  • Tesla said driver Michael Butler had the accelerator pressed to the floor, overriding what was more likely the car’s Full Self-Driving system and sending it to 73 mph before impact.
  • Butler had told local authorities he was using Tesla’s Autopilot feature before the crash, creating a key dispute that federal investigators will test against the vehicle’s onboard data logs.
  • Avila’s family has sued Butler and Tesla for negligence, while the NTSB joins the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in a parallel probe likely to compel the company to turn over those records.

Insights

When a self-driving car crashes, who has the final say: the driver’s story or the company’s black box data?
If 'Full Self-Driving' still requires a human driver, is the technology a safety feature or a legal liability for its owner?
Are we trading predictable human errors for unpredictable machine failures as AI drivers become more common on our roads?