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Elon Musk Says Autopilot Was Off in Texas Tesla Crash That Killed Two Video

Elon Musk deflected blame Monday for a deadly crash of a Tesla Inc. Model S on the outskirts of Houston, tweeting that the initial data accessed by the company indicates the vehicle didn’t have its Autopilot driver-assistance technology enabled.

Data logs recovered “so far” showed that Autopilot wasn’t engaged and that the owner of the car hadn’t purchased a “Full Self-Driving” option to enhance its functionality, the chief executive officer said. Tesla rose in extended trading.

Musk’s comment appeared to answer a key question about a Saturday night crash in a suburban neighborhood. The Tesla vehicle traveled a short distance and smashed into a tree, erupting into flames and killing two male occupants whose identities have not been released by the medical examiner’s office.

“We got several calls about a fire in the woods,” Palmer Buck, chief of the The Woodlands Fire Department, said in a phone interview Monday. “When we arrived, the vehicle was fully engulfed in flames. There was no one behind the wheel.”

The crash took place near The Woodlands, a planned community located about 30 miles north of Houston.

Local police had also said that “no one” was driving the vehicle, and the deceased occupants were found in the front passenger seat and rear seat. The fact that no one was behind the wheel of the vehicle prompted speculation as to whether the Autopilot feature had been engaged and improperly used.

Tesla has said the system -- which is primarily for highway travel -- isn’t a substitute for drivers and requires “active driver supervision.”

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This site provides links to random videos hosted at YouTube, with the emphasis on random. 🎥

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Users can upload, view, rate, share, and comment on videos, with content spanning video clips, music videos, live streams, and more.

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