
Orphan Sues Tesla Claiming Family Died in Crash Because Safety Features Failed
- by The New York Sun
- Jun 26, 2025
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A young New Jersey man who lost his entire family last summer when their Tesla crashed into a concrete barrier on the Garden State Parkway claimed that the EV’s “Autopilot” feature should have kicked in to prevent the fatal accident.
Max Dryerman, a 20-year-old student from Woodcliff Lake, along with his two aunts, filed a wrongful death suit with a federal court at Camden, N.J. on behalf of the family estate, claiming the braking system and other safety features in their Tesla Model S were defective.
Mr. Dryerman was at school at Drexel University in Philadelphia when his sister, Brooke, 17, and his parents, David and Michele, were killed in the tragic crash in Woodbridge just before midnight on September 14. The family was heading back to their Bergen County home after attending the Sea Hear Now music festival at Asbury Park. Their car was heading northbound on the toll highway when it suddenly ran off the road to its left, hitting a sign and guardrail before crashing into a concrete bridge support.
His lawsuit alleges that Tesla’s “Autopilot” and other driving assistance features, like forward collision warning and land departure avoidance, should have prevented the car from careening off the road.
“Despite the vehicle camera system [detecting] an approaching stationary obstacle,” the complaint states according to local reports, “the vehicle continued— without braking or reduction in acceleration or engine torque—into the stationary obstacle.”
“Thousands of Tesla drivers have relied on Tesla’s [technology] as though it were capable of safe, fully autonomous self-driving… when in fact it is incapable of safely handling a variety of routine roadway scenarios without driver input.”
Tesla officials did not immediately return a request for comment.
Questions of safety have long been raised regarding the safety of Tesla vehicles, with particular concern centered around their autonomous features.
Earlier this month, the car manufacturer launched its “RoboTaxi” pilot program in Austin, Texas, despite widespread concern that the self-driving cars have poor safety protocols.
In a demonstration at East Austin attended by the New York Sun on June 13, the self-driving Tesla Model Y repeatedly failed to conduct emergency stops for hazards on the road.
In a demonstration by consumer advocacy group The Dawn Project in East Austin, mannequins simulated children running to a school bus. This reporter witnessed eight trials in which the self-driving Tesla — the same model planned for the Robotaxi program — failed every time, striking the dummies despite having ample time to stop.
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