A 2019 crash in Florida highlights how gaps in Tesla’s driver-assistance system and distractions can have tragic consequences. George Brian McGee's

‘It Happened So Fast’: Inside a Fatal Tesla Autopilot Accident

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2021-08-17 11:30:05

A 2019 crash in Florida highlights how gaps in Tesla’s driver-assistance system and distractions can have tragic consequences.

George Brian McGee's Tesla Model S after it crashed into a parked vehicle while operating on Autopilot in Key Largo, Fla., in 2019.  Credit... via Monroe County Sheriff's Department

George Brian McGee, a finance executive in Florida, was driving home in a Tesla Model S operating on Autopilot, a system that can steer, brake and accelerate a car on its own, when he dropped his phone during a call and bent down to look for it.

Neither he nor Autopilot noticed that the road was ending and the Model S drove past a stop sign and a flashing red light. The car smashed into a parked Chevrolet Tahoe, killing a 22-year-old college student, Naibel Benavides.

One of a growing number of fatal accidents involving Tesla cars operating on Autopilot, Mr. McGee’s case is unusual because he survived and told investigators what had happened: He got distracted and put his trust in a system that did not see and brake for a parked car in front of it. Tesla drivers using Autopilot in other fatal accidents have often been killed, leaving investigators to piece together the details from data stored and videos recorded by the cars.

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