Evidence40%Reported
FactIn ProgressRegulatory·March 23, 2026
Tesla Files Motion to Dismiss Colorado Autopilot Wrongful Death Lawsuit Based on Telemetry Data
Tesla filed a motion to dismiss a high-profile wrongful death lawsuit in Colorado, presenting vehicle data logs showing Autopilot and FSD were not active during a fatal 2022 crash where the driver's BAC was three times the legal limit.
Evidence Strength
Evidence40%Reported
Based on trade press
Single publisher source
Insights
First tracked
March 23, 2026
Last updated
March 23, 2026
Sources
1 source
Related Developments
Tesla Sues California DMV Over Autopilot/FSD Naming RestrictionsNHTSA Probes Tesla FSD Performance in Glare and Low Visibility ConditionsCybertruck Owner Files Lawsuit Alleging FSD Negligence and Musk Leadership FailuresCourt Upholds $243 Million Verdict Against Tesla in Fatal Autopilot CrashNvidia and Uber Announce Global Robotaxi Network Launching in 2027, Directly Competing with Tesla
Sources (1)
Source Timeline
Evidence Strength
Evidence40%Reported
Based on trade press
Single publisher source
Insights
First tracked
March 23, 2026
Last updated
March 23, 2026
Sources
1 source
Related Developments
Tesla Sues California DMV Over Autopilot/FSD Naming RestrictionsNHTSA Probes Tesla FSD Performance in Glare and Low Visibility ConditionsCybertruck Owner Files Lawsuit Alleging FSD Negligence and Musk Leadership FailuresCourt Upholds $243 Million Verdict Against Tesla in Fatal Autopilot CrashNvidia and Uber Announce Global Robotaxi Network Launching in 2027, Directly Competing with Tesla
