The mother of 20-year-old Samuel Tremblett has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Tesla, alleging her son died trapped in his burning Model Y after a crash due to faulty electronic door handles. The suit includes a harrowing 911 call transcript where Tremblett pleaded for help as the vehicle erupted in flames. This case highlights ongoing safety concerns with Tesla's door design, now under federal investigation.
On October 29, 2025, around 1 a.m., Samuel Tremblett, a 20-year-old Syracuse University student from Middleborough, Massachusetts, was driving a 2021 Tesla Model Y on Route 138 in Easton when he lost control and crashed into a tree. The vehicle immediately burst into flames, trapping Tremblett inside due to inoperable electronic door handles, according to the lawsuit filed by his mother, Jacquelyn Tremblett, on February 4, 2026, in U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts.
In a desperate 911 call, Tremblett told the operator: “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. Help… Help.” First responders arrived quickly but could not extinguish the blaze or rescue him amid its severity, with police reporting four explosions in the first 10 minutes. Firefighters took four hours to put out the fire, later finding Tremblett's heavily burned remains in the back seat. He died from thermal injuries and smoke inhalation.
The suit demands $25 million in compensatory damages and accuses Tesla of designing "unreasonably dangerous" vehicles with electronic handles that fail during electrical system failures, like crashes. It notes that manual releases exist but are not clearly marked or intuitive, especially in emergencies. Tesla's lithium-ion batteries can undergo thermal runaway, causing intense, hard-to-extinguish fires.
This is the latest in at least 15 similar deaths since 2016 where occupants were trapped in burning Teslas, per a Bloomberg investigation. Jacquelyn Tremblett 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 National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is probing door handles in nearly 175,000 Model Y vehicles. China has banned hidden handles starting next year, requiring mechanical releases. Tesla has not commented but previously announced automatic unlocking after serious collisions.