US | Tesla NHTSA Seeks Info on Fatal, Fiery Cybertruck Crash Victim couldn't immediately be identified due to burns By Newser Editors and Wire Services Posted Aug 8, 2024 7:01 AM CDT Copied Visitors look over a 2024 Cybertruck in the Tesla display at the Electrify Expo, Sunday, July 14, 2024, in north Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski) Federal safety authorities say they are seeking information on a crash and fire involving a Tesla Cybertruck that killed a driver of the futuristic new pickup in Texas, per the AP. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said Wednesday it is gathering information from Tesla. The agency did not send crash investigators, nor has it opened a formal investigation into the crash. It did not say if it is investigating the cause of the fire or whether the driver was using a partially automated driving system. Messages were left Wednesday seeking comment from Tesla and the Texas Department of Public Safety. The death apparently is the first involving the angular stainless steel-clad truck, which went on sale Nov. 30. KHOU-TV reported that state troopers are investigating the crash, which occurred in the Baytown area of Chambers County early Monday. The truck was heading down a parkway when it left the road for an unknown reason, hit a concrete culvert and went up in flames, the station reported, adding neither the victim nor license plate could be immediately identified due to fire. The Cybertruck was recalled twice in June to fix problems with trim pieces that can come loose and front windshield wipers that can fail. It has been recalled four times since its introduction. Read These Next He 12 days into livestream when viewers noticed he wasn't moving. Hillary Clinton has a new prediction about SCOTUS. That massive civil penalty Trump was hit with just got thrown out. Andy Reid was nearly shot in his own office. Report an error