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Tesla on 'autopilot' hits Nash County deputy's cruiser, while driver watches movie

A man was driving his Tesla on "autopilot" mode and crashed into a Nash County Sheriff's Officer and State Highway Patrol officer parked on the side of U.S. Highway 64 near Spring Hope, officials said.

Posted Updated

By
Joe Fisher
, WRAL reporter
SPRING HOPE, N.C. — A man was driving his Tesla on "autopilot mode" early Wednesday when he nearly missed hitting a Nash County deputy standing outside his cruiser – before crashing into patrol cars from the Nash County Sheriff's Office and State Highway Patrol parked on the side of U.S. Highway 64.

Devainder Goli, a Raleigh doctor, was in the Tesla, watching a movie on his cell phone while his car drove itself, officials said.

The Tesla collided with the deputy's car first, which then was pushed into the State Highway Patrol car from the impact.

Photo of Nash County Sheriff's Officer's car that was crushed in collision on Wednesday morning

The deputy was conducting a lane closure overnight on U-S 64, near Spring Hope, as a highway patrol trooper investigated a separate crash. Both the deputy and trooper were outside their cars.

"Luckily, the state trooper pushed our deputy out of the way when he heard the tires squall and in an instant we could have lost a life or several lives. It could have been very horrific," said Nash County Sheriff Keith Stone.

Goli works at Halifax Regional Medical Center in Roanoke Rapids and was driving back to Raleigh when the accident occurred. He was charged with a move over violation and viewing a television device while driving.

Photo of the Tesla that was crushed during a crash on US Highway 64 on Wednesday. Officials say that the doctor who was driving this car was watching a movie and was driving the car on autopilot mode.
The Tesla is marketed as having "full self-driving capabilities" and is created using artificial intelligence technology. The autopilot feature is described on Tesla's website as a feature that "enables your car to steer, accelerate and brake automatically within its lane."
"Current Autopilot features require active driver supervision and do not make the vehicle autonomous," the website said.

“There needs to come a time when we need to understand that automation can not do everything," said Stone. "It’s not enhancing our safety, and in this situation, it could kill two law enforcement agents.”

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