Sunday, October 26, 2025
INBV News
Submit Video
  • Login
  • Register
  • Home
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Weather
  • World News
  • Videos
  • More
    • Podcasts
    • Reels
    • Live Video Stream
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Weather
  • World News
  • Videos
  • More
    • Podcasts
    • Reels
    • Live Video Stream
No Result
View All Result
INBV News
No Result
View All Result
Home Technology

Hacker uncovers ‘missing’ Tesla Autopilot data in deadly crash, triggering $243M verdict to victims’ families

INBV News by INBV News
September 2, 2025
in Technology
371 28
0
Hacker uncovers ‘missing’ Tesla Autopilot data in deadly crash, triggering $243M verdict to victims’ families
548
SHARES
2.5k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

A Miami jury has ordered Tesla to pay $243 million over a fatal 2019 Autopilot crash in Florida after a hacker sipping on a Venti-size hot chocolate at an area Starbucks uncovered key vehicle data that the corporate had claimed it couldn’t find.

The decision, delivered last month in federal court, held Tesla partially chargeable for the Key Largo wreck that killed 22-year-old Naibel Benavides Leon and left her boyfriend, Dillon Angulo, seriously injured.

Jurors saw evidence showing that Tesla’s own systems recorded a “collision snapshot” within the moments before the crash — data the corporate insisted was missing until a hacker extracted it from the automotive’s Autopilot computer at a Starbucks, based on the Washington Post.

A fatal 2019 crash involving a Tesla was the topic of a lawsuit brought by the families of the victims. The image above shows the moment a Tesla rammed right into a parked vehicle in Key Largo, Fla., in 2019. Singleton Schreiber
Jurors saw evidence showing that Tesla’s own systems recorded a “collision snapshot” within the moments before the crash. Singleton Schreiber

Tesla had argued the crash was caused entirely by driver George McGee, who admitted he was using Autopilot when he looked all the way down to grab a cellphone.

The corporate told jurors its manual makes clear that drivers must stay alert and that “this crash had nothing to do with Tesla’s Autopilot technology.”

However the jury sided partially with Angulo and the Benavides family, which accused Tesla of misleading them for years about what data were available.

Tesla was held partially chargeable for a Key Largo wreck that killed 22-year-old Naibel Benavides Leon (right) and left her boyfriend, Dillon Angulo, seriously injured. Family Handout

The hacker, known online as @greentheonly, recovered the deleted snapshot last fall. He found the file “inside minutes” and confirmed it had been transmitted to Tesla’s servers immediately after the wreck.

The reconstructed data showed the Tesla’s cameras spotted a vehicle roughly 170 feet away and a pedestrian about 116 feet out, because the automotive plotted a path through the couple’s parked truck.

Tesla’s trial attorney, Joel Smith, admitted the corporate had been “clumsy” but denied misconduct.

Dillon Angulo, who was injured in a 2019 crash involving a Tesla Model S operating on Autopilot, receives treatment in a hospital at an unknown location on this handout image obtained by Reuters on Aug. 4, 2025. via REUTERS

“We didn’t think we had it, and we discovered we did … that is an amazingly helpful piece of data,” he said.

Plaintiffs’ lawyers countered that Tesla not only didn’t warn the motive force that the road was ending but in addition “deceived” investigators about data it had “before the cops even arrived.”

Start your day with all you must know

Morning Report delivers the newest news, videos, photos and more.

Thanks for signing up!

The Miami verdict marked a rare courtroom defeat for Tesla’s driver-assist technology. The corporate has won other Autopilot cases and quietly settled several more, but lawyers say this one cracked open Tesla’s secretive crash data systems in a way that resonated with jurors.

“The message from the jury is that ‘You probably did something fallacious, change what you’re doing,’” attorney Don Slavik, who has multiple Autopilot cases pending, told the Washington Post.

The Angulo and Benavides families accused Tesla of misleading them for years about what data were available. Family Handout

Already, the ruling is reverberating beyond Florida. A Texas shareholder lawsuit cites the Miami verdict to allege Tesla defrauded investors over its autonomy claims.

In California, one other fatal crash case tied to Autopilot is about for trial this fall, with plaintiffs’ attorneys vowing to hunt a verdict “north of a billion dollars.”

Tesla has asked the judge to throw out the Miami verdict or order a brand new trial, arguing that the information dispute was “irrelevant.”

The corporate vows to appeal if needed, keeping alive the legal battle over who bears responsibility when experimental software collides with distracted driving.

For Angulo and the Benavides family, the judgment was less about money than exposing Tesla’s handling of the case.

“We’ve this relief that the world knows, but it surely doesn’t change anything for us,” said Naibel’s sister, Neima.

Tesla was accused of not only failing to warn the motive force that the road was ending but of getting “deceived” investigators about data it had “before the cops even arrived.” via REUTERS

“My sister will not be here. And nothing will bring her back.”

Theodore J. Boutrous Jr., Tesla’s lead attorney within the case, provided a press release to The Post which read: “That is a vital case because unfounded and unconstitutional verdicts like this one against Tesla pose real dangers to safety innovation and technological advancement, creating perverse incentives for manufacturers by discouraging recent safety enhancements.” 

Boutrous told The Post that the Supreme Court “has repeatedly warned in regards to the due-process dangers of arbitrary and grossly excessive punitive-damage awards.”

“This verdict is a real outlier given the facts and law and we look ahead to setting things right,” Boutrous told The Post.

RELATED POSTS

Microsoft AI bots won’t talk dirty with users, exec says, taking swipe at OpenAI

Elon Musk calls ISS ‘corporate terrorists’ for rejecting his pay package

A Miami jury has ordered Tesla to pay $243 million over a fatal 2019 Autopilot crash in Florida after a hacker sipping on a Venti-size hot chocolate at an area Starbucks uncovered key vehicle data that the corporate had claimed it couldn’t find.

The decision, delivered last month in federal court, held Tesla partially chargeable for the Key Largo wreck that killed 22-year-old Naibel Benavides Leon and left her boyfriend, Dillon Angulo, seriously injured.

Jurors saw evidence showing that Tesla’s own systems recorded a “collision snapshot” within the moments before the crash — data the corporate insisted was missing until a hacker extracted it from the automotive’s Autopilot computer at a Starbucks, based on the Washington Post.

A fatal 2019 crash involving a Tesla was the topic of a lawsuit brought by the families of the victims. The image above shows the moment a Tesla rammed right into a parked vehicle in Key Largo, Fla., in 2019. Singleton Schreiber
Jurors saw evidence showing that Tesla’s own systems recorded a “collision snapshot” within the moments before the crash. Singleton Schreiber

Tesla had argued the crash was caused entirely by driver George McGee, who admitted he was using Autopilot when he looked all the way down to grab a cellphone.

The corporate told jurors its manual makes clear that drivers must stay alert and that “this crash had nothing to do with Tesla’s Autopilot technology.”

However the jury sided partially with Angulo and the Benavides family, which accused Tesla of misleading them for years about what data were available.

Tesla was held partially chargeable for a Key Largo wreck that killed 22-year-old Naibel Benavides Leon (right) and left her boyfriend, Dillon Angulo, seriously injured. Family Handout

The hacker, known online as @greentheonly, recovered the deleted snapshot last fall. He found the file “inside minutes” and confirmed it had been transmitted to Tesla’s servers immediately after the wreck.

The reconstructed data showed the Tesla’s cameras spotted a vehicle roughly 170 feet away and a pedestrian about 116 feet out, because the automotive plotted a path through the couple’s parked truck.

Tesla’s trial attorney, Joel Smith, admitted the corporate had been “clumsy” but denied misconduct.

Dillon Angulo, who was injured in a 2019 crash involving a Tesla Model S operating on Autopilot, receives treatment in a hospital at an unknown location on this handout image obtained by Reuters on Aug. 4, 2025. via REUTERS

“We didn’t think we had it, and we discovered we did … that is an amazingly helpful piece of data,” he said.

Plaintiffs’ lawyers countered that Tesla not only didn’t warn the motive force that the road was ending but in addition “deceived” investigators about data it had “before the cops even arrived.”

Start your day with all you must know

Morning Report delivers the newest news, videos, photos and more.

Thanks for signing up!

The Miami verdict marked a rare courtroom defeat for Tesla’s driver-assist technology. The corporate has won other Autopilot cases and quietly settled several more, but lawyers say this one cracked open Tesla’s secretive crash data systems in a way that resonated with jurors.

“The message from the jury is that ‘You probably did something fallacious, change what you’re doing,’” attorney Don Slavik, who has multiple Autopilot cases pending, told the Washington Post.

The Angulo and Benavides families accused Tesla of misleading them for years about what data were available. Family Handout

Already, the ruling is reverberating beyond Florida. A Texas shareholder lawsuit cites the Miami verdict to allege Tesla defrauded investors over its autonomy claims.

In California, one other fatal crash case tied to Autopilot is about for trial this fall, with plaintiffs’ attorneys vowing to hunt a verdict “north of a billion dollars.”

Tesla has asked the judge to throw out the Miami verdict or order a brand new trial, arguing that the information dispute was “irrelevant.”

The corporate vows to appeal if needed, keeping alive the legal battle over who bears responsibility when experimental software collides with distracted driving.

For Angulo and the Benavides family, the judgment was less about money than exposing Tesla’s handling of the case.

“We’ve this relief that the world knows, but it surely doesn’t change anything for us,” said Naibel’s sister, Neima.

Tesla was accused of not only failing to warn the motive force that the road was ending but of getting “deceived” investigators about data it had “before the cops even arrived.” via REUTERS

“My sister will not be here. And nothing will bring her back.”

Theodore J. Boutrous Jr., Tesla’s lead attorney within the case, provided a press release to The Post which read: “That is a vital case because unfounded and unconstitutional verdicts like this one against Tesla pose real dangers to safety innovation and technological advancement, creating perverse incentives for manufacturers by discouraging recent safety enhancements.” 

Boutrous told The Post that the Supreme Court “has repeatedly warned in regards to the due-process dangers of arbitrary and grossly excessive punitive-damage awards.”

“This verdict is a real outlier given the facts and law and we look ahead to setting things right,” Boutrous told The Post.

1

Do you trust technology Today?

Tags: 243MAutopilotCrashDatadeadlyFamilieshackerMISSINGteslatriggeringuncoversVerdictVictims
Share219Tweet137
INBV News

INBV News

Related Posts

edit post
Microsoft AI bots won’t talk dirty with users, exec says, taking swipe at OpenAI

Microsoft AI bots won’t talk dirty with users, exec says, taking swipe at OpenAI

by INBV News
October 25, 2025
0

Geeks who need to talk dirty with artificial intelligence bots can have to look somewhere aside from Microsoft. The software...

edit post
Elon Musk calls ISS ‘corporate terrorists’ for rejecting his pay package

Elon Musk calls ISS ‘corporate terrorists’ for rejecting his pay package

by INBV News
October 25, 2025
0

Tesla CEO Elon Musk lashed out on the leading shareholder advisors on Wednesday, shining a highlight right into a corner...

edit post
China, Russia sending attractive women to seduce US tech execs: report

China, Russia sending attractive women to seduce US tech execs: report

by INBV News
October 24, 2025
0

China and Russia have deployed attractive women to america to seduce unwitting Silicon Valley tech executives as a part of...

edit post
Intel (INTC) earnings report Q3 2025

Intel (INTC) earnings report Q3 2025

by INBV News
October 24, 2025
0

Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan holds a wafer of CPU tiles for the Intel Core Ultra series 3, code-named Panther Lake,...

edit post
Elon Musk’s Tesla disappoints investors despite record sales

Elon Musk’s Tesla disappoints investors despite record sales

by INBV News
October 23, 2025
0

Tesla reported record third-quarter revenue that beat Wall Street estimates on Wednesday, driven by the very best quarterly sales of its electric...

Next Post
edit post
U.S. tourism tries to win back Canada

U.S. tourism tries to win back Canada

edit post
Kirk Herbstreit goes off on Barstool after ‘bad’ hot mic moment

Kirk Herbstreit goes off on Barstool after ‘bad’ hot mic moment

CATEGORIES

  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcast
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Videos
  • Weather
  • World News

CATEGORY

  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcast
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Videos
  • Weather
  • World News

SITE LINKS

  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA

[mailpoet_form id=”1″]

  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA

© 2022. All Right Reserved By Inbvnews.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Weather
  • World News
  • Videos
  • More
    • Podcasts
    • Reels
    • Live Video Stream

© 2022. All Right Reserved By Inbvnews.com

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist