Cybertruck owner credits Tesla FSD for avoiding deadly crash

A Cybertruck owner in New Mexico says Tesla's Full Self-Driving system steered his vehicle away from a head-on collision with an oncoming pickup truck. Clifford Lee was driving at 75 mph on Highway 54 when the incident occurred. He escaped uninjured after the system intervened at the last moment.

Clifford Lee, a Tesla Cybertruck owner, was traveling at approximately 75 mph on a two-lane stretch of Highway 54 in New Mexico with Full Self-Driving (FSD) engaged. According to a report from CBS Austin, an oncoming pickup truck suddenly crossed the center line into his lane, leaving only seconds to react.

FSD intervened by steering the Cybertruck toward a narrow opening near the guardrail. The maneuver was so precise that the pickup merely clipped the Cybertruck's side mirror, avoiding a full collision. Lee walked away uninjured but was left shaken.

"I almost got killed," Lee told CBS Austin. "I was shaking uncontrollably for a while."

Tesla's FSD is classified as an SAE Level 2 driver-assistance system, requiring constant driver attention and supervision. It builds on the standard Autopilot features, including Navigate on Autopilot, Auto Lane Change, and Autopark. The software is an $8,000 option on models like the Cybertruck, Model 3, and Model Y, and is included in the Luxe Package for Model S and Model X.

The incident comes amid ongoing regulatory scrutiny of FSD, with reports of vehicles running red lights or entering opposing lanes, and some lawsuits. Critics argue the "Full Self-Driving" name is misleading, leading legacy automakers to decline licensing it. However, this case illustrates the system's potential in critical moments.

Recent updates include FSD v14 in November 2025, which brought full features like reversing and advanced parking to the Cybertruck. The latest version, v14.2.2, rolled out in December 2025, improved the neural network vision encoder. Tesla has also introduced user-friendly changes, such as defaulting new drivers to "Sloth Mode" and allowing texting under certain conditions. The company is testing unsupervised FSD with its Robotaxi fleet in Austin, Texas.

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Dramatic illustration of a crashed Tesla Cybertruck on a Houston overpass, central to lawsuit over Full Self-Driving failure.
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Texas Cybertruck owner Justine Saint Amour sues Tesla for over $1M after Full Self-Driving crash into overpass barrier

AI에 의해 보고됨 AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

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 driver tested a Full Self-Driving Tesla Cybertruck, engaging in a race against a mid-engine Corvette and faking sleep at the wheel. The experience highlighted both positive and negative aspects of the technology. Authorities pulled over the vehicle due to the driver's apparent lack of alertness.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Tesla's Full Self-Driving (FSD) navigated onto the dirt shoulder to pass a bus crash blocking the road ahead, in an incident shared on X by Sawyer Merritt on March 15, 2026.

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