Baltimore Sun

Safety agency to probe 2 more Tesla crashes

- By Tom Krisher

The U.S. government’s highway safety agency said Thursday it will send teams to investigat­e two November crashes in California and Ohio involving Teslas that may have been operating on automated driving systems.

The probes bring to 35 the number of crashes investigat­ed by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion since 2016 in which either Tesla’s “Full Self-Driving” or “Autopilot” systems likely were in use. Nineteen people were killed in the crashes.

The California crash occurred on Thanksgivi­ng and involved eight vehicles on the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge. The driver told authoritie­s that the Tesla Model S was using the company’s “Full Self-Driving” software, according to a Highway Patrol report obtained by CNN.

The Ohio crash happened Nov. 18 near Toledo, when a Tesla Model 3 crashed into an Ohio Highway Patrol SUV stopped on a roadway with its emergency lights flashing.

The eight-vehicle crash happened around noon, closing two lanes and clogging traffic on the holiday.

Nine people were treated for minor injuries including a child who was hospitaliz­ed, according to CNN, which got a copy of the crash report through a public records request.

The Tesla Model S driver reportedly told the California Highway Patrol that the company’s “Full Self-Driving” system was operating when the crash occurred, and that it braked unexpected­ly while traveling at 55 mph. The Model S shifted into the far left lane, then braked to 20 mph, causing the pileup, CNN said the report stated.

In the crash near Toledo, an Ohio State Highway Patrol trooper and another motorist were injured when a Tesla Model 3 struck the rear of the police SUV parked on a road with its emergency lights flashing.

The Toledo Blade reported that the highway patrol report didn’t address whether any automated systems were operating.

The NHTSA has been investigat­ing Tesla automated systems for 6 ½ years without taking enforcemen­t action.

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