Investigators found no evidence of mechanical malfunction, though the crash remains under active investigation by local authorities, the National Transportation Safety Board, and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The precise sequence of events and the vehicle's operational state at impact remain disputed.
Tesla executives, including CEO Elon Musk and AI Vice President Ashok Elluswamy, have stated that vehicle data shows Butler manually overrode the self-driving system by pressing the accelerator to 100% in a residential area and maintained acceleration through impact. Separately, Avila's family filed suit against Tesla last week alleging gross negligence and failure to warn about defective self-driving systems. The lawsuit names Tesla, Butler, or both as potentially responsible.
Attorneys should monitor this case as a potential bellwether for autonomous vehicle liability. The manslaughter charge against the driver is unusual; most AV incidents have resulted in civil claims rather than criminal prosecution. The parallel federal investigations—NHTSA has opened nearly 50 special investigations into Tesla's systems since 2016—may produce regulatory guidance affecting how courts evaluate driver versus manufacturer responsibility in future autonomous vehicle cases.