Skip to main content

Market Overview

Judge Rules Tesla And Musk Ignored Known Autopilot Flaw

Share:
Judge Rules Tesla And Musk Ignored Known Autopilot Flaw

The most recent court ruling in Florida suggests that Tesla Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA) and its CEO, Elon Musk, were potentially aware of a significant Autopilot defect and chose to overlook it.

What Happened: A Reuters report indicates that Judge Reid Scott of the Circuit Court for Palm Beach County found “reasonable evidence” to suggest that Tesla and Musk knew about a malfunctioning Autopilot system but decided to let the vehicles operate despite the risk. The ruling was in response to a lawsuit linked to a fatal accident involving Tesla’s Autopilot system.

The court’s decision suggests that Tesla and Musk may have falsely presented their products as autonomous in their marketing campaigns. It also indicates that Musk’s public pronouncements significantly swayed the public perception of Tesla’s product capabilities.

The lawsuit is connected to a 2019 accident near Miami, where a Tesla Model 3, controlled by Autopilot, collided with a tractor-trailer, resulting in the vehicle owner Stephen Banner‘s death. Initially scheduled for trial in October, the case has been indefinitely postponed.

See Also: SpaceX CEO Elon Musk Confirms Starship’s Next Launch Imminent Despite Explosion

Following the judge’s summary, there were “alarming inconsistencies” between Tesla’s internal knowledge and its marketing claims. This ruling could lead to a public trial, and if found guilty, Tesla and Musk may face significant penalties.

Tesla has not responded to this latest development. Earlier this year, the company successfully defended itself in two product liability trials in California related to the Autopilot system.

Why It Matters: This development comes after Tesla’s Autopilot was criticized when its engineers testified about unaddressed crash limitations. The engineers revealed in a lawsuit that Tesla failed to address the deficiencies in its Autopilot system after a similar fatal crash in 2016.

In a contrasting incident, a Chinese court cleared Tesla of any blame in a 2022 accident involving a Model Y. The verdict came after a forensic investigation determined that the accident was not due to defects in the vehicle’s steering or braking system.

Read Next: Tesla Analyst Urges Cybertruck Cancellation As EV Maker Looks ‘Stuck In Slow Lane’ For Next 12–18 Months

Image made via pictures on Shutterstock


Engineered by
Benzinga Neuro, Edited by


Pooja Rajkumari


The GPT-4-based Benzinga Neuro content generation system exploits the
extensive Benzinga Ecosystem, including native data, APIs, and more to
create comprehensive and timely stories for you.
Learn more.


 

Related Articles (TSLA)

View Comments and Join the Discussion!

Posted-In: EVs mobility Stories That Matter Tesla Autopilot Crash Tesla FSDNews Tech General

Don't Miss Any Updates!
News Directly in Your Inbox
Subscribe to:
Benzinga Premarket Activity
Get pre-market outlook, mid-day update and after-market roundup emails in your inbox.
Market in 5 Minutes
Everything you need to know about the market - quick & easy.
Fintech Focus
A daily collection of all things fintech, interesting developments and market updates.
SPAC
Everything you need to know about the latest SPAC news.
Thank You

Thank you for subscribing! If you have any questions feel free to call us at 1-877-440-ZING or email us at vipaccounts@benzinga.com