Elon Musk’s Tesla faces DOJ probe over self-driving claims
Tesla is under criminal investigation in the US over claims
that the company’s electric vehicles can drive themselves, three people
familiar with the matter said.
The Department of Justice launched the previously
undisclosed probe last year following more than a dozen crashes, some of them
fatal, involving Tesla’s driver assistance system Autopilot, which was
activated during the accidents, the people said.
As early as 2016, Tesla’s marketing materials have touted
Autopilot’s capabilities. On a conference call that year, Elon Musk, the
Silicon Valley automaker’s chief executive, described it as “probably better”
than a human driver.
Last week, Musk said on another call Tesla would soon
release an upgraded version of “Full Self-Driving” software allowing customers
to travel “to your work, your friend’s house, to the grocery store without you
touching the wheel.”
A video currently on the company’s website says: “The person
in the driver’s seat is only there for legal reasons. He is not doing anything.
The car is driving itself.”
However, the company also has explicitly warned drivers that
they must keep their hands on the wheel and maintain control of their vehicles
while using Autopilot.
The Tesla technology is designed to assist with steering,
braking, speed and lane changes but its features “do not make the vehicle
autonomous,” the company says on its website.
Such warnings could complicate any case the Justice
Department might wish to bring, the sources said.
Tesla, which disbanded its media relations department in
2020, did not respond to written questions from Reuters on Wednesday. Musk also
did not respond to written questions seeking comment. A Justice Department
spokesperson declined to comment.
Musk said in an interview with Automotive News in 2020 that
Autopilot problems stem from customers using the system in ways contrary to
Tesla’s instructions.
Federal and California safety regulators are already
scrutinizing whether claims about Autopilot’s capabilities and the system’s
design imbue customers with a false sense of security, inducing them to treat
Teslas as truly driverless cars and become complacent behind the wheel with
potentially deadly consequences.
The Justice Department investigation potentially represents
a more serious level of scrutiny because of the possibility of criminal charges
against the company or individual executives, the people familiar with the
inquiry said.
As part of the latest probe, Justice Department prosecutors
in Washington and San Francisco are examining whether Tesla misled consumers,
investors and regulators by making unsupported claims about its driver
assistance technology’s capabilities, the sources said.
Officials conducting their inquiry could ultimately pursue
criminal charges, seek civil sanctions or close the probe without taking any
action, they said.
The Justice Department’s Autopilot probe is far from
recommending any action partly because it is competing with two other DOJ
investigations involving Tesla, one of the sources said. Investigators still
have much work to do and no decision on charges is imminent, this source said.
The Justice Department may also face challenges in building
its case, said the sources, because of Tesla’s warnings about overreliance on
Autopilot.
For instance, after telling the investor call last week that
Teslas would soon travel without customers touching controls, Musk added that
the vehicles still needed someone in the driver’s seat. “Like we’re not saying
that that’s quite ready to have no one behind the wheel,” he said.
The Tesla website also cautions that, before enabling
Autopilot, the driver first needs to agree to “keep your hands on the steering
wheel at all times” and to always “maintain control and responsibility for your
vehicle.”
Barbara McQuade, a former US attorney in Detroit who
prosecuted automotive companies and employees in fraud cases and is not
involved in the current probe, said investigators likely would need to uncover
evidence such as emails or other internal communications showing that Tesla and
Musk made misleading statements about Autopilot’s capabilities on purpose.
Several probes
The criminal Autopilot investigation adds to the other
probes and legal issues involving Musk, who became locked in a court battle
earlier this year after abandoning a $44 billion takeover of social media giant
Twitter, only to reverse course and proclaim excitement for the looming
acquisition.
In August 2021, the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration opened an investigation into a series of crashes, one of them
fatal, involving Teslas equipped with Autopilot slamming into parked emergency
vehicles.
NHTSA officials in June intensified their probe, which
covers 830,000 Teslas with Autopilot, identifying 16 crashes involving the
company’s electric cars and stationary first-responder and road maintenance
vehicles. The move is a step that regulators must take before requesting a
recall. The agency had no immediate comment.
In July this year, the California Department of Motor
Vehicles accused Tesla of falsely advertising its Autopilot and Full
Self-Driving capability as providing autonomous vehicle control. Tesla filed
paperwork with the agency seeking a hearing on the allegations and indicated it
intends to defend against them. The DMV said in a statement it is currently in
the discovery stage of the proceeding and declined further comment.
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