The Mercury News

California places Tesla’s ‘Full Self-Driving’ under review

- By Tom Krisher and Stefanie Dazio

LOS ANGELES — California’s Department of Motor Vehicles is reviewing whether Tesla is violating a state regulation by advertisin­g its vehicles as being fully autonomous without meeting the legal definition of self-driving.

The department confirmed the review Monday in an email to The Associated Press. State regulation prohibits advertisin­g vehicles for sale or lease as autonomous if they can’t comply with the regulatory definition, it said.

Tesla advertises a $10,000 “Full Self-Driving” option on the website for its electric vehicles, but the same website says the vehicles cannot drive themselves. CEO Elon Musk has said he expects Tesla’s vehicles will be able to drive themselves more safely than humans sometime this year.

“The current enabled features require active driver supervisio­n and do not make the vehicle autonomous,” the website says.

Tesla is testing its “Full Self-Driving” software in the U.S. in cars driven by selected owners.

Palo Alto-based Tesla, which has disbanded its public relations department, did not respond Monday to a request for comment.

The DMV, which regulates testing of self-driving vehicles on California roads, said violating the regulation can bring a suspension of autonomous vehicle permits and revocation of a manufactur­er’s license.

It would not comment further on the review, including when it began.

Tesla has a DMV permit to test autonomous vehicles with human backup drivers. But it is not among the companies permitted to test without human drivers.

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