NHTSA

NHTSA Asks Tesla To Share Autopilot Crash Data Or Pay Over $114 Million In Fine

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) sent Tesla an 11-page letter demanding data on exactly how the Autopilot system detects and perceives emergency vehicles and other hallmarks of a crash scene, including flashing lights, flares, and reflective vests.

NHTSA

The investigation, which covers 765,000 Tesla Model S, 3, X, and Ys from between 2014 and 2021, could be a turning point in the automaker’s occasionally-combative relationship with the government — in which either Tesla cooperates or risks paying huge fines and being found liable for multiple crashes.

The regulator will also “assess the technologies and methods used to monitor, assist, and enforce the driver’s engagement with the dynamic driving task during Autopilot operation.”

The NHTSA formally launched its investigation into Autopilot’s tendency to hit emergency vehicles pulled over on the side of the road in mid-August, based on 11 crashes that have happened since 2018.

However it had to add a 12th to the list after a Tesla with Autopilot crashed into a Florida Highway Patrol car on a highway near Orlando on Saturday, killing one person and injuring another 17.

Laguna Beach Police Department photo shows a Tesla sedan, left, in autopilot mode that crashed into a parked police cruiser

In this case, Tesla has until October 22 to respond to the NHTSA’s letter and send over all of the data that the agency requested.

If it fails or refuses to do so — the company could be fined over $114 million.

Reference- AP News, NHTSA website, CarAndDrive, InsideEVs, Futurism