-

Attorney Amy Witherite of Witherite Law Group Asks: Should Government Shut Down Tesla’s Autopilot?

DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Attorney Amy Witherite, whose firm specializes in motor vehicle accidents emphasizes that federal investigations, a well-documented Wall Street Journal article and Tesla’s own disclaimers point to the urgent need for the government to mandate a shutdown of Tesla’s Autopilot system to ensure public safety.

“In an aircraft, the autopilot is a device used to guide a plane without direct assistance from the pilot,” explains Amy Witherite, founder of the Witherite Law Group. “Modern autopilots can control every part of the flight, from just after takeoff to landing.

“The very name Autopilot for a Tesla is misleading,” said Witherite. “Tesla’s Autopilot requires much more monitoring than an aircraft’s autopilot,” says Witherite. “Pilots have more specialized training than drivers including training on how and when to use the technology.”

According to the Wall Street Journal, the Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) are examining whether Tesla misled customers and investors with marketing that overstated the technology’s capabilities, giving drivers a false impression of what it can realistically do.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) said that its examination of Tesla’s Autopilot uncovered a trend of “avoidable crashes involving hazards that would have been visible to an attentive driver.”

According to the NHTSA report, Tesla’s Autopilot design has “led to foreseeable misuse and avoidable crashes.” The system did not “sufficiently ensure driver attention and appropriate use.”

Federal investigators note “if the vehicle encounters a circumstance outside Autopilot’s object or event detection response capabilities, crash outcomes are often severe because neither the system nor the driver reacts appropriately, resulting in high-speed differential and high energy crash outcomes.”

“In one case,” notes Witherite, “Tesla’s Autopilot missed stopping for a child exiting a school bus. Something that should not be hard for the system to miss. In another case, the vehicle slammed into a giant tractor-trailer truck crossing the highway.”

Tesla issued the recall to address a previous NHTSA investigation into whether the Autopilot system contained a defect that created an unreasonable risk to vehicle safety. The resulting recall affected more than 2 million Model Y, X, S, 3, and Cybertruck vehicles made since 2012 that were equipped with Autopilot. In updating the vehicle software, Tesla said it had installed new safeguards to prevent driver misuse.

However the NHTSA’s Office of Defects Investigation observed this pattern across all Tesla models and hardware versions. Crash and human factors assessment showed that Autopilot controls did not sufficiently ensure driver attention and appropriate use.

“The safest approach for all drivers would be for Tesla to disable the Autopilot system in its vehicles until we can be assured that it is safe,” said Witherite. “In addition, all data provided to federal regulators should be made public so we can see the full results of federal investigations.”

The Witherite Law Group specializes in vehicle accident cases and offers crucial support for individuals involved in accidents with driverless vehicles. For more information visit their website. www.witheritelaw.com.

Contacts

The Margulies Communications Group
214-368-0909
mediainquiries@prexperts.net

Witherite Law Group


Release Versions

Contacts

The Margulies Communications Group
214-368-0909
mediainquiries@prexperts.net

More News From Witherite Law Group

Witherite Law Group Warns at Least Eight Companies Will Use Texas Highways to Test Driverless Trucks With Little Oversight

DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Attorney and traffic safety expert Amy Witherite warns that at least eight companies have announced they are operating or plan to operate driverless 18-wheelers on Texas highways. As autonomous truck operations expand along busy and often congested corridors of I-35, I-45, I-10, and throughout the metro areas around Dallas–Fort Worth, Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, Witherite says the stakes could not be higher. While issues have been reported with many types of auton...

Attorney Amy Witherite: Marketing and Hype Should Not Trump Safety

DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--As advanced driver-assistance technologies spread rapidly through new-vehicle lineups, safety leaders are warning that marketing hype is putting lives at risk. Terms such as Autopilot and Full Self-Driving and even Tesla’s resurrected “Mad Max Mode” foster public confusion about what these systems can safely do. “Using reckless labels that imply a car can think for itself gives drivers a false sense of security,” said Amy Witherite, a Dallas-based attorney and nationall...

Tesla and Waymo Under Federal Scrutiny as New Rules and Safety Probes Raise Autonomous Vehicle Concerns, says Witherite Law Group

DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Recent federal actions involving Tesla and Waymo are intensifying national debate over the safety, oversight, and transparency of autonomous and semi-autonomous vehicles. The Witherite Law Group, which represents individuals injured or families who have lost loved ones in traffic crashes, warns that regulatory rollbacks and high-profile incidents expose major gaps in public safety and accountability. Tesla Benefits from Relaxed Crash-Reporting Rules The U.S. Department...
Back to Newsroom