MIAMI (AP) – Elon Musk fought court cases on opposite coasts Monday, raising a question about the billionaire that could either speed his plan to put self-driving Teslas on U.S. roads or throw up a major roadblock: Can this wildly successful man who tends to exaggerate really be trusted?
Looming over two cases threatening Musk’s car company is a single question: Can he be trusted?
MIAMI (AP) – Elon Musk fought court cases on opposite coasts Monday, raising a question about the billionaire that could either speed his plan to put self-driving Teslas on U.S. roads or throw up a major roadblock: Can this wildly successful man who tends to exaggerate really be trusted?
In Miami, a Tesla driver who has admitted he was wrong to reach for a dropped cell phone moments before a deadly accident, spoke of the danger of putting too much faith in Musk’s technology – in this case his Autopilot program.
“I trusted the technology too much,” said a visibly shaken George McGee, who slammed into a woman out stargazing, sending her 75 feet through the air. “I believed that if the car saw something in front of it, it would provide a warning and apply the brakes.”
In unusual coincidence, regulators arguing an Oakland, California, case tried to pin exaggerated talk about the same Tesla technology at the center of a request to suspend the carmaker from being able to sell vehicles in the state.