Santa Fe New Mexican

Tesla has shaky history with investigat­ors over safety

National Transporat­ion Safety Board official: Carmaker cooperatin­g

- By Faiz Siddiqui

SAN FRANCISCO — Officials said Tesla is not party to a probe into a weekend Model S crash that killed two people — a departure from typical protocol and a potential sign of the auto company’s strained relations with investigat­ors.

National Transporta­tion Safety Board spokesman Keith Holloway said that Tuesday was investigat­ors’ first full day on the scene of the Houston-suburb crash, and that they were probing the vehicle’s operation and the subsequent fire.

He added that Tesla was “working with” investigat­ors “but is not a party to the investigat­ion.”

The NTSB booted Tesla as a party to its probe into another fatal crash in 2018 after the car manufactur­er disclosed investigat­ive informatio­n before the probe’s conclusion.

Holloway referred questions on Tesla’s involvemen­t to the company, which has disbanded its public relations department. The company did not respond to a request for comment.

On Monday, Elon Musk tweeted that Tesla data “so far” indicated that the car’s Autopilot driver assistance system was not in use during the crash. Autopilot is a Tesla driver assistance system that can navigate from highway on-ramp to off-ramp, can detect stop lights and stop signs, and can self-park and summon the vehicle. Police previously said there was not anyone in the drivers’ seat during the crash.

According to Reuters, the Harris County constable said it planned to serve search warrants to Tesla to secure data from the car that crashed. The Harris County constable did not return repeated messages requesting comment.

Musk also tweeted Tuesday about the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion, which has taken a more handsoff approach to safety regulation of the electric carmaker. “NHTSA is great,” he wrote. Investigat­ors are probing how two men were killed Saturday when a Model S sedan veered off the road, leading to a fire that took hours to completely extinguish, according to police.

The NTSB said Monday that it was sending investigat­ors to the site of the crash and subsequent fire, which required more than 30,000 gallons to extinguish.

“Our investigat­ion has determined that one of the victims was in the front passenger seat; one was in the back seat,” Mark Herman, a constable for Harris County Precinct 4, told the station KHOU, adding that police were “100 percent certain” that the driver’s seat was unoccupied.

Tesla has said drivers should pay full attention while using the Autopilot feature.

In past investigat­ions, officials have required Tesla’s assistance to decode data from Tesla’s proprietar­y onboard systems. That generally makes the automaker’s cooperatio­n critical to federal safety investigat­ions.

Tesla was previously removed from an investigat­ion into the death of 38-year-old Walter Huang, who was killed when his Model X SUV slammed into a highway barrier in California in 2018.

The NTSB ultimately cited Autopilot system limitation­s, the driver’s distractio­n from a cellphone game, and apparent overrelian­ce on the Autopilot system, in the crash.

Before the investigat­ion’s conclusion, Tesla issued a preliminar­y explanatio­n in a blog post, where it said Autopilot was activated moments before the crash and that the car’s cruise control distance was set to a minimum, meaning it would tail somewhat closely behind other cars.

“At this time the NTSB needs the assistance of Tesla to decode the data the vehicle recorded,” NTSB spokesman Chris O’Neil said at the time.

“In each of our investigat­ions involving a Tesla vehicle, Tesla has been extremely cooperativ­e on assisting with the vehicle data. However, the NTSB is unhappy with the release of investigat­ive informatio­n by Tesla.”

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCAITED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? National Transporta­tion Safety Board spokesman Keith Holloway said Tesla was ‘working with’ investigat­ors into a Houston crash of one of its vehicles ‘but is not a party to the investigat­ion.’
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCAITED PRESS FILE PHOTO National Transporta­tion Safety Board spokesman Keith Holloway said Tesla was ‘working with’ investigat­ors into a Houston crash of one of its vehicles ‘but is not a party to the investigat­ion.’

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