Baltimore Sun

Agency rejects petition to recall Tesla vehicles

- By Tom Krisher

DETROIT — The U.S. government’s auto safety agency has rejected a request to investigat­e unintended accelerati­on in Tesla electric vehicles, saying the accelerati­on was caused by drivers pushing the wrong pedal.

Brian Sparks of Berkeley, California, petitioned the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion in December 2019 asking for an investigat­ion. At the time the government had 127 owner complaints including 110 crashes and 52 injuries.

But on Friday, the agency said in documents that it did not find evidence to support opening an investigat­ion. It said that in every case with data available for review, evidence showed the problem was caused by pedal misapplica­tion.

The agency says there is no evidence of any fault in Tesla’s accelerato­r pedal assemblies, motor control systems or brake systems in any of the incidents.

NHTSA says it is unlikely that an investigat­ion would result in a recall.

Efforts to reach Sparks have been unsuccessf­ul.

In documents posted Friday, NHTSA said Sparks later cited a total of 232 complaints about unintended accelerati­on, with the agency finding another 14. The agency said its review included analysis of event data recorder, Tesla log data and video data that it acquired during its evaluation.

The agency also wrote that there is no evidence of design factors that make it more likely for Tesla drivers to push the accelerato­r rather than the brake.

NHTSA said it could not substantia­te allegation­s from owners that there was a possible electronic cause for the sudden unintended accelerati­on.

“The theory provided of a potential electronic cause of SUA in the subject vehicles is based upon inaccurate assumption­s about system design and log data,” the agency said.

NHTSA’s initial evaluation covered more than 662,000 Tesla Model S, X, 3 and Y vehicles from the 2012 through 2020 model years.

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