Tesla has reached a settlement in the lawsuit brought by the family of a Silicon Valley engineer who tragically lost his life in a crash while relying on the company’s semi-autonomous driving software.
The settlement, whose details were not disclosed in court documents filed just a day before the scheduled trial, stems from a fatal crash that occurred in 2018 on a San Francisco Bay Area highway.
Walter Huang’s family filed a lawsuit in 2019 alleging negligence and wrongful death, aiming to hold Tesla and its CEO Elon Musk accountable for allegedly overstating the capabilities of Tesla’s self-driving technology, known as Autopilot. The family contended that Tesla’s promotion of Autopilot led vehicle owners to believe they could rely too heavily on the system, thus diminishing the need for driver vigilance.
According to evidence presented, Huang activated Autopilot on his Model X during his commute to work at Apple after dropping his son off at preschool. However, less than 20 minutes later, the vehicle veered out of its lane and accelerated before colliding with a concrete highway barrier in Mountain View, California, while traveling at over 70 miles per hour. Tragically, Huang, 38, lost his life in the accident, leaving behind his wife and two young children.
This case underscores broader concerns raised by multiple lawsuits across the United States regarding the accuracy of Musk’s claims about the effectiveness of Tesla’s autonomous technology. The U.S. Justice Department initiated an inquiry last year into Tesla and Musk’s promotion of autonomous technology, though details of the investigation remain scarce.
While Tesla emerged victorious in a separate trial in Southern California last year regarding perceptions of its Autopilot feature in a 2019 crash, this settlement underscores the ongoing scrutiny and legal challenges facing the company in relation to its self-driving technology.