Dramatic illustration of a Tesla Gigafactory worker injured by falling Cybertruck parts during a factory accident.
Dramatic illustration of a Tesla Gigafactory worker injured by falling Cybertruck parts during a factory accident.
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Former Tesla supervisor sues over Cybertruck parts injury

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A former safety supervisor at Tesla's Gigafactory in Austin, Texas, has filed a lawsuit against the company, alleging severe injuries from unsecured Cybertruck parts that fell on him in February 2024. The plaintiff claims the incident resulted from inadequate safety measures prioritizing production over worker protection. He seeks more than $1 million in damages following his termination a month later.

Craig Thompson, a former safety supervisor at Tesla's Gigafactory in Austin, Texas, is suing the electric vehicle maker after an incident in February 2024 left him with significant injuries. According to court filings, Thompson was walking through the facility when approximately 150 pounds of unsecured Cybertruck components slid off a moving transport cart and struck him. The boxes were reportedly not strapped down and appeared visibly unstable. Thompson attempted to alert the cart operator to reduce speed, but the driver did not notice, and the load shifted before any corrective action.

The lawsuit details injuries including a traumatic brain injury, as well as damage to his shoulder, spine, and knees, leading to ongoing physical impairments and cognitive limitations. Thompson alleges that the Gigafactory's pedestrian walkways were obstructed or insufficiently marked, filled with materials and machines that created dangerous conditions for workers on foot. The complaint further claims that Tesla required employees to yield to transport carts at all times, a policy that prioritized vehicle traffic and production throughput over worker safety. It also asserts violations of federal workplace safety standards.

Approximately one month after the incident, Thompson's employment was terminated, which the suit attributes to his injuries and diminished work capacity. Tesla has not yet commented on the lawsuit, according to reports. This case highlights ongoing safety concerns at the facility amid broader scrutiny of Tesla's operations.

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Dramatic illustration of lawsuit alleging Tesla ignored prior assault by Austin mass shooter on Gigafactory coworker, featuring security footage and shooting aftermath.
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Lawsuit alleges Austin mass shooter assaulted Tesla coworker months earlier

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In the ongoing coverage of the March 1, 2026, Austin mass shooting that killed three and injured over a dozen, a new lawsuit claims the gunman, Ndiaga Diagne, assaulted a 65-year-old Tesla coworker at the company's Gigafactory in December 2025. The suit accuses Tesla of negligence for not supervising an employee with known aggressive tendencies.

A driver in Houston has filed a lawsuit against Tesla following an incident where her Cybertruck allegedly attempted to drive off an overpass while using the autopilot feature. The suit claims that Tesla's self-driving technology is defectively designed and misleadingly marketed as fully autonomous. The event occurred last year.

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Justine Saint Amour, a Texas Cybertruck owner, is suing Tesla for more than $1 million plus punitive damages after her vehicle crashed into a concrete barrier on a Houston overpass while using the Full Self-Driving (FSD) system. Filed in Harris County District Court, the lawsuit alleges negligence in design, marketing, and retaining CEO Elon Musk, amid ongoing scrutiny of Tesla's driver-assistance technology.

A US federal judge has rejected Tesla's request to overturn a $243 million jury verdict related to a 2019 fatal crash involving the company's Autopilot feature. The ruling holds Tesla partially responsible for the incident that killed one person and injured another. Tesla is expected to appeal the decision.

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Victor Nechita, Tesla's vehicle program manager for the Cybercab, has left the company after nearly nine years, just days after the first production unit rolled off the line at Gigafactory Texas. Nechita, who joined as a Model 3 intern in 2017, led the Cybercab from concept to initial production. His departure adds to a series of senior executive exits at Tesla amid preparations for volume production in April.

Two Tesla Cybertrucks were completely destroyed in a fire on the rooftop of a seven-story parking garage in Santa Monica, California, on Wednesday afternoon. The blaze, reported around 3:16 p.m. at the 2200 block of Colorado Avenue near Olympic and Cloverfield Boulevards, also damaged several other Tesla vehicles, with no injuries reported. The cause remains under investigation; authorities confirmed the trucks were not plugged in for charging.

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A recent analysis by FuelArc has calculated that the Tesla Cybertruck's fire fatality rate is 17 times higher than that of the Ford Pinto, the 1970s vehicle infamous for fire risks. The comparison highlights five reported Cybertruck fire fatalities among 34,438 vehicles sold. This rate stands at 14.52 per 100,000 units, compared to the Pinto's 0.85 per 100,000 over its production decade.

 

 

 

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