A federal jury Friday discovered Elon Musk’s Tesla partially responsible for a deadly 2019 crash involving the electrical car (EV) maker’s autopilot system.
The Miami jury decided Tesla was 33 % accountable for the crash and ordered the corporate to pay a number of million {dollars} in damages.
The household of Naibel Benavides sued the EV maker over the crash that resulted within the 22-year-old’s demise, alleging the corporate’s autopilot system had “defective and unsafe characteristics” that it did not warn shoppers about.
“Tesla’s lies turned our roads into test tracks for their fundamentally flawed technology, putting everyday Americans like Naibel Benavides and Dillon Angulo in harm’s way,” Brett Schreiber, lead legal professional for the plaintiffs, mentioned in a press release.
“Today’s verdict represents justice for Naibel’s tragic death and Dillon’s lifelong injuries, holding Tesla and Musk accountable for propping up the company’s trillion-dollar valuation with self-driving hype at the expense of human lives,” he continued.
Within the 2019 crash, the driving force of the automobile, George McGee, had activated Tesla’s autopilot operate and brought his eyes off the street to have a look at his cellphone when the system did not register an upcoming intersection.
The automobile drove by the intersection and struck a parked automobile, killing Benavides and injuring her boyfriend, Dillon Angulo.
The jury awarded $59 million in compensatory damages to Benavides’s household and $70 million to Angulo, whereas hitting Tesla with $200 million in punitive damages.
Tesla mentioned in a press release that it plans to enchantment the choice “given the substantial errors of law and irregularities at trial.”
“Today’s verdict is wrong and only works to set back automotive safety and jeopardize Tesla’s and the entire industry’s efforts to develop and implement life-saving technology,” the EV maker mentioned.
“Even though this jury found that the driver was overwhelmingly responsible for this tragic accident in 2019, the evidence has always shown that this driver was solely at fault because he was speeding, with his foot on the accelerator – which overrode Autopilot – as he rummaged for his dropped phone without his eyes on the road,” it added. “To be clear, no car in 2019, and none today, would have prevented this crash.”