USA TODAY US Edition

Tesla’s Autopilot system labled ‘demonstrab­ly dangerous’ in lawsuit

- Chris Woodyard @ChrisWoody­ard USA TODAY

Tesla’s Autopilot partial selfdrivin­g system is flawed, causing cars to steer erraticall­y when it is engaged, and the electric-car maker hasn’t been timely in delivering promised safety features, a lawsuit filed Wednesday alleges.

“Autopilot capabiliti­es that consumers paid $5,000 extra to obtain are anything but ‘safer’ and ‘stress-free,’ ” alleges the lawsuit on behalf of three Tesla owners. “Many owners report the Autopilot is essentiall­y unusable and demonstrab­ly dangerous.”

The suit, filed in U.S. District Court in San Jose, seeks class-action status. In reaction, Tesla, based nearby in Palo Alto, Calif., dismissed the suit as a “disingenuo­us attempt to secure attorney’s fees posing as a legitimate legal action,” and said it misreprese­nts many facets of its systems.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has touted his company’s Autopilot system as one of the most advanced. It relies on a network of sensors and radar to help keep the car in its lane, braking and speeding up with traffic and allowing the car to change lanes on its own.

But the suit alleges that Autopilot and other safety systems haven’t lived up to their billing. It says owners were told systems such as automatic braking and collision avoidance were going to be flashed to cars via over-the-air updates by December, but the updates didn’t come through as planned.

Instead, owners were given a “dangerousl­y defective” Traffic Aware Cruise Control system and limited front collision warning that lacks the automatic braking function found in rivals’ cars, many of which cost much less, the suit says.

The suit, filed by the Seattlebas­ed firm of Hagens Berman, says its plaintiffs have found Autopilot hasn’t worked as promoted. When owner Dean Sheikh had the Enhanced Autopilot system flashed to his car in February, his Model S sedan “operated in an unpredicta­ble manner, sometimes veering out of lanes, lurching, slamming on the brakes for no reason and failing to slow or stop when approachin­g other vehicles or obstacles.”

Sheikh, according to the suit, found the system unsafe to operate.

Tesla said it was updating its Autopilot system last year after a May incident in which an owner was killed in his Tesla while the system was in operation. The system apparently didn’t recognize a truck crossing its path on a freeway. The car slammed into the truck, killing the driver.

Tesla has repeatedly warned owners they need to be ready to intervene when their cars are operating in Autopilot mode.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Tesla says it has made owners fully aware that its Autopilot system is evolving.
GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Tesla says it has made owners fully aware that its Autopilot system is evolving.

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