28 Feb 2023

Tesla, Elon Musk sued by shareholders over self-driving safety claims

1:55 pm on 28 February 2023
12 November 2021, Lower Saxony, Hanover: Cars park past a dealership of electric car maker Tesla. Tesla's stock has gained about 50 percent since the beginning of the year.

Tesla shareholders say they were misled for four years over the risk to people's safety from some of the company's technologies. Photo: AFP

Tesla and its chief executive Elon Musk are being sued by shareholders who accuse them of overstating the effectiveness and safety of their electric vehicles' autopilot and full self-driving technologies.

In a proposed class action filed in San Francisco federal court, shareholders said Tesla defrauded them over four years with false and misleading statements that concealed how its technologies, suspected as a possible cause of multiple fatal crashes, "created a serious risk of accident and injury".

They said Tesla's share price fell several times as the truth became known, including after the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration began investigating the technologies, and reports that the Securities and Exchange Commission was investigating Musk's autopilot claims.

The share price also fell 5.7 percent on 16 February after NHTSA forced a recall of more than 362,000 Tesla vehicles equipped with full self-driving beta software because they could be unsafe around intersections.

Tesla has said it acquiesced to the recall, though it disagreed with NHTSA's analysis.

"As a result of defendants' wrongful acts and omissions, and the precipitous decline in the market value of the company's common stock, plaintiff and other class members have suffered significant losses and damages," the complaint said.

Tesla, which does not have a media relations department, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Monday's lawsuit led by shareholder Thomas Lamontagne seeks unspecified damages for Tesla shareholders from 19 February, 2019 to 17 February, 2023. Chief financial officer Zachary Kirkhorn and his predecessor Deepak Ahuja are also defendants.

Tesla's share price closed on Monday up $US10.75 ($NZ17.40), or 5.5 percent, at $207.63, but the stock has lost about half its value since peaking in November 2021.

Musk, the world's second-richest person, is expected at Tesla's 1 March investor day to promote the company's artificial intelligence capability and plans to expand its vehicle lineup.

-Reuters

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