Dramatic illustration of a crashed Tesla Cybertruck on a Houston overpass, central to lawsuit over Full Self-Driving failure.
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

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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.

Justine Saint Amour purchased a used Cybertruck equipped with Tesla's Full Self-Driving (FSD) package from a Florida dealership in February 2025. On August 18, 2025, while driving on Interstate 69's Eastex Freeway in Houston with FSD engaged, the vehicle approached a Y-shaped overpass split near the 256 Eastex Park and Ride. According to the lawsuit, the Cybertruck failed to follow the curve to the right and drove straight toward a concrete barrier, captured on dashcam footage.

Saint Amour disengaged the system and attempted to steer but collided with the barrier. She sustained injuries including two herniated discs in her lower back, one in her neck, sprained tendons in her wrist, and neuropathy causing numbness, tingling, and weakness in her right hand.

Handled by Hilliard Law, the suit accuses Tesla of negligence, design defects (including lack of LiDAR sensors rejected by Musk in favor of cameras, and ineffective automatic emergency braking), and misleading marketing of the SAE Level 2 system as 'Full Self-Driving' despite requiring constant supervision. It specifically claims negligence in 'hiring and retaining Elon Musk as CEO, and allowing him to participate in product design decisions' and override engineers. The complaint quotes: 'Elon Musk is an aggressive and irresponsible salesman, who has a long history of making dangerous design choices, and over-promising the features of his products.' Musk has dismissed LiDAR as a 'fool’s errand.'

Attorney Bob Hilliard stated, 'What happened to my client was not an accident, but a foreseeable result of choices Tesla made knowingly, repeatedly, and without regard for the people on the road.'

The case follows a $243 million verdict upheld from a 2019 Autopilot crash and a December 2025 California ruling that Tesla's FSD marketing is 'actually, unambiguously false and counterfactual' (under appeal). The NHTSA is investigating 2.88 million Tesla vehicles with FSD after 58 incidents. Tesla has not publicly responded.

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X discussions feature criticism of Tesla's FSD from safety advocates calling for a ban due to the alleged crash failure; skepticism from Tesla supporters mocking the lawsuit, doubting FSD engagement, and stressing supervised driving; and factual corrections noting the system's use per reports.

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Courtroom scene illustrating Tesla's lawsuit against California DMV over Autopilot and Full Self-Driving false advertising claims.
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Tesla sues California DMV to overturn false advertising ruling on Autopilot and Full Self-Driving

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Tesla filed a lawsuit on February 13, 2026, against the California Department of Motor Vehicles, challenging a December 2025 ruling that accused the company of misleading consumers through marketing of its Autopilot and Full Self-Driving features. Despite complying with required changes to avoid a sales license suspension, Tesla argues the decision was factually erroneous, legally flawed, and lacked evidence of consumer harm. The dispute underscores intense scrutiny of Tesla's driver-assistance systems amid its major California operations.

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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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.

Tesla initiated unsupervised robotaxi rides in Austin, Texas, on January 22, 2026, advancing its driverless ambitions amid a Full Self-Driving (FSD) subscription overhaul effective February 14, plans for Optimus humanoid robot sales by end-2027, falling vehicle deliveries, and intensifying regulatory probes.

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Tesla has produced its first Cybercab, a steering wheel-less autonomous vehicle, at Gigafactory Texas. The company shared a photo of the milestone on X, with volume production planned for April 2026. The Cybercab is designed exclusively for robotaxi service, raising questions about the readiness of Tesla's self-driving technology.

Tesla owners have collectively driven more than 7.5 billion miles using Full Self-Driving (Supervised) software, with the majority on highways. Meanwhile, public testing of unsupervised FSD is expanding in Austin. A personal account highlights seamless performance in challenging conditions.

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Building on its Q4 2025 earnings announcement to shift Fremont factory space from Model S and X production to Optimus robots, Tesla faces an upheld $243 million Autopilot liability verdict while cutting Cybertruck prices to spur demand. CEO Elon Musk outlined near-term autonomy goals, with Robotaxi service expanding unsupervised operations.

 

 

 

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