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Tesla debunks deadly FSD incident story as driver hit the gas instead of brakes

Model 3 riding with the Full Self-Driving feature.
ⓘ Tesla
Model 3 riding with the Full Self-Driving feature.
The NHTSA opened a Special Crash Investigation, as it has done in over 46 Tesla cases over the past decade. Tesla's logs, however, show that the driver disengaged FSD before crashing the Model 3 into the house.

A highly publicized incident with a Model 3 can't be attributed to the Full Self-Driving system being active at the time, debunked Tesla.

The Model 3 sedan crashed into a home in Texas at high speed, resulting in a 76-year-old victim, but the FSD option had already been deactivated at the time, it turned out.

While the driver said that the car was driving itself during the accident, he may have wittingly or unwittingly misled the police. According to Tesla's activity logs, the driver actually stepped on the gas before the crash, disengaging FSD and accelerating the vehicle instead of applying the brakes.

There have been several instances where Tesla drivers mistake the gas pedal for the brakes, leading to jumps off parking lots onto an ambulance and even a jetty, so it is not out of the question that something similar might have been in play here.

Lending further credence to the theory for panicking and hitting the wrong pedal is the fact that, according to Tesla's AI chief Ashok Elluswamy, the driver pressed the gas all the way down to "100%," reaching a speed of 73 mph in a residential neighborhood, and kept pressing it even after the Model 3 had hit the building. In this case, FSD can't be blamed, as it wouldn't have left the car hit 70+ miles per hour in a residential area, let alone crash it into a house without any reaction.

All incidents where active FSD or Autopilot may have been in play are logged into the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's dedicated database, where they get investigated on a case-by-case basis. While the so-called Special Crash Investigation on this one could confirm Tesla's findings that a panicked driver may have been at fault, the findings would still be important for determining how people react during critical situations in autonomous vehicles.

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> Expert Reviews and News on Laptops, Smartphones and Tech Innovations > News > News Archive > Newsarchive 2026 06 > Tesla debunks deadly FSD incident story as driver hit the gas instead of brakes
Daniel Zlatev, 2026-06-23 (Update: 2026-06-23)