Lodi News-Sentinel

A ‘very big deal’: Federal safety regulator takes aim at Tesla Autopilot

- Russ Mitchell

After four years of laissez-faire treatment under the Trump administra­tion, the nation's top auto safety regulator is making it clear to Elon Musk and Tesla that there's a new sheriff in town.

In June, the National Highway Traffic and Safety Administra­tion ordered automakers to cough up data on every crash that involves automated driving systems, such as Tesla's Autopilot. Last month it launched an investigat­ion into a dozen crashes in which Teslas on Autopilot plowed into parked emergency vehicles.

Then, on Tuesday, NHTSA's Office of Defects Investigat­ion sent an 11page letter instructin­g Tesla to provide the agency with an enormous volume of detailed data on each Tesla vehicle sold or leased in the United States from 2014 to 2021. "This could be a very big deal," said Bryant Walker Smith, a professor at the University of South Carolina, one of the legal field's foremost experts in automated motor vehicle law.

Back in 2016, when automated driving systems first drew broad public attention, the agency published enforcemen­t guidelines making clear that it could enforce safety regulation­s governing software systems, not just traditiona­l components such as carburetor­s, air bags or ignition switches.

Subsequent­ly, however, the Trump administra­tion took a lax approach to NHTSA enforcemen­t. As many as 30 investigat­ions into Tesla were launched, delving into Autopilot and other safety concerns, but the vast majority were either disbanded or are still in process.

The agency's new activism is bad news for Tesla, whose electric car revenues have been boosted in part by the popularity of its Autopilot driver assist system, and by the $10,000 it receives from buyers of its Full Self-Driving system (which in fact is not a full self-driving system).

If the traffic and safety administra­tion finds Autopilot or FSD defective in a way that jeopardize­s public safety, the features could be recalled, a prospect that could force changes to the systems and potentiall­y lead to a ban while safety concerns are addressed, legal experts say.

Even a finding that Tesla has promoted what NHTSA calls "predictabl­e abuse" could cause problems for Autopilot. Tesla legal language says human drivers must pay attention at all times with Autopilot engaged, but Tesla marketing, including videos of Musk driving Teslas without using his hands, has seemingly contradict­ed the warnings. A growing library of YouTube videos shows Tesla drivers misusing the system, some of them crawling into the back seat while the car "drives itself."

Although NHTSA has put Tesla on a tight deadline to submit its data, which are due Oct. 22, Smith said any recall or other enforcemen­t wouldn't be immediate, and by the time NHTSA acted, new software iterations or a change in Tesla marketing could make the matter moot.

"This is also a very long and potentiall­y hidden process that will depend on how Tesla responds," Smith said. "I could see this potentiall­y taking a very long time."

If the past is any indication, Musk may prove less than cooperativ­e. He once hung up on the head of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board. As the Securities and Exchange Commission sought informatio­n from Tesla in 2020, Musk sent out a tweet obliquely inviting the commission to perform oral sex on him.

Tesla could attempt to forestall the inquiry by declaring much of the data in question to be proprietar­y business informatio­n, Smith said. The company could obscure the data using formats that make it hard to pull out useful informatio­n. The agency itself may not have sufficient expertise to analyze the data dump, he said, and there could be legal challenges.

But that hardly means the attempt is fruitless, Smith added. "This is NHTSA trying to unlock the doors to a whole lot of informatio­n, and it will be fascinatin­g to see what jumps out."

 ?? POOL/GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk has a history of thumbing his nose at regulators. Will he take a new probe of the company's Autopilot software more seriously?
POOL/GETTY IMAGES/TNS Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk has a history of thumbing his nose at regulators. Will he take a new probe of the company's Autopilot software more seriously?

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