The remains of a Tesla vehicle are seen after crashing in The Woodlands, Texas, on April 17, 2021, in this still image of the video obtained through social media. Video made on April 17, 2021.
Scott J. Engle | via Reuters
According to an autopsy report, one of the two victims of a fatal accident that affected a Tesla car in Texas had a blood alcohol level that exceeded the legal driving limit.
No one was found in the driver’s seat in the April crash, where a Model S caught fire after hitting a tree and killing both people in the car, according to police at the time.
According to the Harris County Institute of Forensic Science report, William Varner, who was found in the left passenger seat, detected in the blood 0.151 g / 100 ml of ethanol (grain alcohol) in the blood.
The legal blood alcohol level for driving in Texas is 0.08%.
The cause of Varner’s death was “a blunt force trauma and thermal injuries with smoke inhalation,” according to the report.
Police declined to comment on the report, saying the investigation is still ongoing.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has opened 33 investigations into Tesla crashes that involved 11 deaths since 2016 in which it is suspected that advanced driver assistance systems are used, including the Texas crash.
A preliminary report from the National Transportation Safety Board, which is also investigating the Texas crash, said tests showed the vehicle’s automated steering system “was not available” on the road where the crash occurred. accident, but the car’s cruise control feature could still have been in operation.
Tesla markets its advanced driver assistance system as a “fully autonomous driving” capability, but claims that these features do not make the vehicle autonomous and require active driver supervision.