A wrongful death lawsuit accuses Tesla of defective door handles that trapped a 20-year-old driver in a burning Model Y after a crash in Massachusetts. Samuel Tremblett died from injuries sustained in the October 2025 incident, pleading for help in a 911 call. The case highlights ongoing concerns about Tesla's electronic door designs amid regulatory scrutiny.
On October 29, 2025, around 1 a.m., Samuel Tremblett, a 20-year-old Syracuse University student and fashion entrepreneur, was driving a 2021 Tesla Model Y southbound on Route 138 in Easton, Massachusetts. The vehicle veered across the lane and crashed into a tree, bursting into flames immediately after impact, according to a wrongful death lawsuit filed by his mother, Jacquelyn Tremblett, in Massachusetts on February 6, 2026.
Tremblett survived the initial crash but was unable to escape the inferno due to the car's electronic door handles, which the suit describes as "defective and unreasonably dangerous." The exterior handles are flush with the door and extend electronically, while interior handles also rely on power and can fail during electrical failures like a fire. A manual release exists but is not easily discernible in emergencies, the lawsuit alleges. Tremblett's remains were later found in the back seat.
In a harrowing 911 call transcribed in the suit, Tremblett pleaded: “I’m stuck in a car crash … I can’t get out, please help me … I can’t breathe. … It’s on fire, it’s on fire. Help please … I am going to die … I’m dying.” Police arrived quickly but could not suppress the blaze or rescue him, reporting four explosions in the first 10 minutes and taking four hours to extinguish the fire.
Jacquelyn Tremblett, a school guidance counselor, stated: “How could Tesla keep selling vehicles that they know trap people inside their cars after a crash? They could have fixed it, but they refused. Now my son is dead after suffering unmercifully.” The family's attorney, Andrew Nebenzahl, added: “This young man died begging for help. The question is, how many people have to die before Tesla puts its brilliant engineers on solving this problem immediately? It’s happening again and again today.”
The lawsuit cites at least 15 other deaths since 2016 linked to similar door handle issues in Tesla vehicles, with Bloomberg reporting 15 fatalities and the suit alleging 17 related accidents. U.S. auto safety regulators have opened an investigation into nearly 200,000 Tesla vehicles over the handles' safety. Tesla has indicated it is working on a fix, potentially reverting to a mechanical release design from early Model S cars.
In China, regulators finalized a ban on automated electronic door handles this week, requiring mechanical fallbacks for electrical failures, effective January 1, 2027. The rule aims to address similar risks in the electric vehicle market.