The Tesla driver, Kevin George Aziz Riad, 27, was charged with two felony counts of vehicular manslaughter with gross negligence for the deaths of Gilberto Alcazar Lopez and Maria Guadalupe Nieves-Lopez.
“Autopilot or not, from the second they get in a car, drivers are responsible for every single thing that happens,” said Aron Solomon, chief legal analyst for Esquire Digital, in an interview with NBC News. Referring to the gross negligence charges Riad is facing, Solomon said the legal concept for negligence is “situational.”
Jonathan Handel, a lecturer in law at the University of Southern California Gould School of Law and an expert in autonomous vehicles, said the case will hopefully show that semi-autonomous systems, like Autopilot, are not a replacement for human drivers. Lopez and Nieves-Lopez were driving through the intersection of Artesia Boulevard and Vermont Avenue in the Southern California suburb of Gardena when their vehicle was struck by Riad’s car, according to the complaint.
Over the years, Tesla has made headlines after accidents involving its semi-autonomous technology. In 2019, a finance executive in Florida was driving home with his Tesla Model S on Autopilot when he bent down to pick up his cellphone, according to
He absolutely is responsible but that doesn’t mean he’s only one accountable.
I’m sure he’s not the first to get into an accident on cruise control.
I mean why would the man that got 4.5 billion in tax payers subsidies actually tell the truth. If you gave me free 4.5 billion I'm going to lie my ass off. Just like musk.
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