The Columbus Dispatch

NTSB probing Florida crash of Tesla that killed 2 teens

- By Tom Krisher

A federal safety agency is investigat­ing a severe crash and fire involving a Tesla electric car that killed two teenagers in Florida.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board said a four-person team will focus on the emergency response to the post-crash fire in the battery of a Tesla Model S in Fort Lauderdale. The agency does not expect Tesla's semi-autonomous Autopilot system to be a part of the investigat­ion.

It's the second time in the past two months that the agency has investigat­ed a Tesla fire. A probe is under way into a fire in a Tesla Model X SUV that crashed on a freeway near Mountain View, California, on March 23. Lithium-ion batteries like those used by Tesla can catch fire and burn rapidly in a crash, although Tesla has maintained that its vehicles catch fire far less often than those powered by gasoline.

Police say the Tesla in Fort Lauderdale with three teenagers inside crashed into a wall and caught fire on Tuesday evening. Two 18-year-olds were trapped and died when the car became engulfed in flames, police told WPLG-TV. Another teen was thrown from the car and was taken to a hospital where his condition was unknown.

One witness said the Tesla was being driven fast and spun out of control. He said he tried to help but the fire was too intense to get the teenagers out of the car.

Chris O'Neil, spokesman for the NTSB, said Wednesday that investigat­ors don't know what caused the battery fire. He said the agency is investigat­ing because there was a post-crash fire involving an electric vehicle.

Earlier this month, Tesla and the NTSB got into an open feud over Tesla's release of informatio­n from the probe into the Mountain View crash. O'Neil said that despite the dispute, Tesla would be invited to be a party to the investigat­ion of the Fort Lauderdale crash.

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