A Tesla Model 3 crashed into a residential home in Harris County, Texas on the evening of June 19, killing a 76-year-old woman who was inside. The driver told investigators the car was using an automated driving assistance system when it left the road.
A 76-year-old grandmother was killed after a Tesla car crashed through the front of her home in Katy, Texas on Friday.
The 44-year-old driver of the Tesla Model 3 was transported to a local hospital after the incident. The driver told investigators that an automated driving… pic.twitter.com/Lty7SwcPXi
— CBS News (@CBSNews) June 21, 2026
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) opened a formal special crash investigation into the incident on Monday.
Tesla stock (TSLA) was under pressure as the news broke, adding to ongoing scrutiny of the company’s driver-assistance technology.
According to the Harris County Sheriff’s Office, the vehicle “failed to turn right at an intersection and, at a high rate of speed, crashed directly into a house.” Sergeant Alex Turman confirmed police are investigating the driver’s claim that the automated system was active.
The driver was not intoxicated, cooperated with investigators, and was also taken to hospital following the crash.
The woman who was killed was living in the home with her daughter, son-in-law, and three grandchildren. All family members were present at the time of the crash. Her daughter described hearing a “boom” and finding her mother in the aftermath.
A special crash investigation is the most in-depth form of inquiry the NHTSA conducts. While it does not immediately result in penalties for the manufacturer, it can lead to safety recalls or other regulatory action.
Tesla did not respond to requests for comment on the crash or the federal investigation.
Just last week, Democratic Senators Edward Markey and Richard Blumenthal sent a formal letter to the NHTSA demanding a broader investigation into Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (FSD) technology.
The senators argued that Tesla’s safety claims around FSD are based on “misleading data analysis,” including comparisons between unlike crash outcomes and use of incomplete crash data.
They also called on the agency to require more transparent reporting from automakers using autonomous driving systems.
This is not the first time Tesla’s FSD technology has faced federal scrutiny. Earlier this year, the NHTSA expanded a separate investigation into FSD over concerns about its performance in bad weather conditions.
Tesla markets the technology as “Full Self-Driving (Assisted)” — a label that critics say overstates the system’s actual capabilities.
The NHTSA’s special crash program is specifically designed to gather data on incidents involving emerging vehicle technology. That data feeds into future safety standards across the auto industry.
Police said they are “still evaluating what caused the car to fail to control its speed” in the moments before impact. The investigation remains open and active.
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