Fatal Tesla crash in Texas triggers federal probe as senator demands accountability for FSD

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A Tesla Model 3 using automated driving features crashed into a Texas home at 73 mph, killing 76-year-old Martha Avila. NHTSA launched a special investigation while Senator Richard Blumenthal calls for Tesla accountability. Elon Musk and Tesla's AI chief claim the driver manually overrode the system, but lawmakers demand data transparency and question Tesla's safety claims.

NHTSA Investigation Opens After Fatal Tesla Model 3 Crash in Texas

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration launched a special investigation Monday following a fatal Tesla crash that killed 76-year-old Martha Avila in Katy, Texas. The Tesla Model 3 was using self-driving technology when it slammed into a brick home at high speed on Friday near Houston

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. The driver told the Harris County Sheriff's Office he was using Tesla's assisted driving system, though the exact role automated driving technology played remains unclear

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. Video obtained by KHOU-TV captured the vehicle traveling at top speed across the front lawn before ramming into the home's front room, leaving the car encased amid crumbling plaster and split beams.

Source: NBC

Source: NBC

Conflicting Claims Over Manual Acceleration and System Override

Elon Musk and Ashok Elluswamy, Tesla's vice president of AI, quickly responded on X with claims that the driver manually overrode the system. Elluswamy stated the driver pressed the accelerator all the way to 100% in the residential area, reaching 73 mph during the crash and maintaining pressure even after impact

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. Musk wrote that the incident "makes no sense" because Tesla's Full Self-Driving (FSD) technology drives slowly through neighborhood streets

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. However, neither Musk, Elluswamy, nor the driver has posted car data from the crash to corroborate these claims

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. The police report noted the driver was not drunk and is cooperating with authorities.

Richard Blumenthal Demands Accountability and Data Transparency

Senator Richard Blumenthal called for Tesla to be held accountable in an exclusive interview with NBC News, stating that "Tesla must be held accountable and NHTSA should move much more quickly and effectively to investigate"

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. The Connecticut Democrat dismissed Musk's response as "simply an effort to evade responsibility"

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. This incident has resulted in two federal investigations into Tesla and renewed scrutiny of Tesla's driver-assistance technology, adding to nearly 50 NHTSA special investigations involving the company

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Senators Challenge Tesla's Safety Claims and Reporting Methods

Just three days before the crash, Senators Edward Markey and Blumenthal sent a letter to NHTSA demanding a full investigation into Tesla's Full Self-Driving (FSD) technology for safety risks. The senators argued that Tesla's safety claims, including assertions that FSD cars are "10x safer" than human-driven vehicles, rely on "incomplete safety statistics"

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. They criticized Tesla's methodology for counting crashes, noting the company only considers a collision to involve FSD if the system was engaged within five seconds before impact—a narrower window than the 30 seconds NHTSA uses

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. The senators also faulted Tesla for redacting portions of incident reports submitted to NHTSA, hindering data transparency.

Broader Pattern of Federal Investigations Into Tesla

NHTSA has opened 46 special crash investigations involving Teslas using self-driving or driver-assistance technology over the past decade, with more than a dozen crashes resulting in at least one fatality

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. Late last year, the agency launched an investigation into 58 incidents where Teslas reportedly violated traffic safety laws while using self-driving technology, leading to more than a dozen crashes and fires and nearly two dozen injuries

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. A separate investigation examined why Tesla apparently had not been reporting crashes promptly as required.

Implications for Tesla's Robotaxis and AI-Driven Systems

Source: Washington Post

Source: Washington Post

The investigation carries significant weight because Elon Musk considers automated driving technology key to Tesla's future. The CEO is rolling out robotaxis using automated software in several U.S. cities this year and plans to invite Tesla owners to put their cars into the fleet using the same system across the country

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. Tesla stock fell sharply early last year as car sales plunged, but Musk has since shifted the company's narrative to focus less on car sales and more on AI-driven systems and robotaxis. The stock is up 16% in the past year

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. Blumenthal emphasized that "Elon Musk is a trillionaire, he could well afford to make this system safer, or at the very least provide the public with complete and accurate information about the potential dangers of FSD"

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