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Father of Driver In Violent Tesla Crash Blames Sedan's 'Rocket-Ship' Acceleration (autoweek.com)

"A Tesla crash that resulted in the deaths of the driver and a passenger in Indianapolis last November is drawing new controversy after the father of one of the victims made comments regarding the role of the Model S in the incident," Autoweek reports. "The crash occurred in downtown Indianapolis on Nov. 3, 2016, with the Model S driven by 27-year-old Casey Speckman striking a tree and catching fire. Speckman was pronounced dead at the scene while her passenger, 44-year-old Kevin McCarthy, succumbed to his injuries after being taken to the hospital." From the report: A report released last week by the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department disclosed that Speckman had a blood-alcohol level of 0.21, almost three times the legal limit in the state of Indiana, The Indianapolis Star reports. Another new detail has emerged since the violent crash was first reported: The Tesla could have been been trying to maneuver around a vehicle traveling on the wrong side of the street, suggested by closed-circuit footage obtained by the attorney of the driver's father, Jon Speckman. The coroner's report cited blunt-force injuries caused by the crash as the causes of death for both victims, noting the vehicle's fire as a contributing factor, according to The Indianapolis Star. Jon Speckman recently made comments to the newspaper blaming the acceleration of the Tesla Model S. "Had she been in another vehicle, she would have been alive for me to yell at her for driving after drinking," Speckman told The Indianapolis Star in an interview at his attorney's office. "This is a vehicle that travels from 0 to 60 in 3.1 seconds," Speckman also said during the interview. "She's clearly having to swerve to miss a vehicle going the wrong way on a one-way street. If her foot should happen to hit the accelerator, it's like a rocket ship. I don't know why they have to make a car that does that."

63 of 641 comments (clear)

  1. Uber? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't think the Tesla forced her to drive.

    1. Re:Uber? by Big+Hairy+Ian · · Score: 5, Informative

      She was 3 times over the limit and the fuckwit father is blaming the car? Why is this even on SlashDot

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    2. Re:Uber? by guruevi · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Driving a high performance sports car, severely drunk, the wrong way on a one way street into oncoming traffic is the cause for their deaths. And I'm glad they only managed to take themselves out of the gene pool and not someone else.

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    3. Re:Uber? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      To be fair, although she was drunk as shit and should have never been behind a wheel, it appears from camera footage that she was swerving to avoid ANOTHER car that was traveling the wrong way on the street.

    4. Re:Uber? by TimeOut42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And someone probably forced her to buy a sports car. Sorry, sympathy for losing his daughter, but there really is only one person to blame and we all know who it is.

    5. Re: Uber? by msauve · · Score: 4, Informative

      She was 27, which is hardly a child. And if you're implying that her father bought her the car, you're wrong. It belonged to her boss, and the crash occurred after "a company event."

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    6. Re:Uber? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      George W. Bush

    7. Re:Uber? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Seriously 0.2 is nothing and if that's thrice the limit, then the limit is ridiculously low.

      Love from Germany, where the limit is 0.5.

      You must measure things differently there. .27 is the point where they admit you to the hospital to watch your for alcohol poisoning. .5 is WELLLLL beyond the content where they'll pump your stomach.

    8. Re:Uber? by heypete · · Score: 4, Informative

      Seriously 0.2 is nothing and if that's thrice the limit, then the limit is ridiculously low.

      Love from Germany, where the limit is 0.5.

      According to this site, the blood alcohol limit in Germany is 0.05%, not 0.5%. That's a factor of ten difference. The limit in the US, according to the same site, is 0.08%, which is even higher than Germany.

      The driver described in this article had a BAC four times the legal limit in Germany.

    9. Re:Uber? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      There is a severe misunderstanding of numbers here. In the US (and many other places) the blood alcohol concentration is given in parts per one hundred (percent). In Germany, it usually is given in parts per 1000 (permille). So, the articles 0.21 percent BAC end up being 2.1 permille, slighly more than four times (2.1/0.5) the legal limit.

    10. Re: Uber? by tsqr · · Score: 5, Informative

      Why would you give a child a super car?

      Good question, and one asked by lots of commenters. Of course, no one asking this question read TFA, because if they had they would have learned that the Tesla was owned by the passenger (who was her boss), and he was nearly as drunk as the girl. So you have an extremely high-performance car being driven by someone who is very drunk, and also unfamiliar with the car. What could go wrong?

    11. Re:Uber? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 4, Informative

      We don't measure BAC in percents around here but rather in permilles. That might have been the confusion.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    12. Re:Uber? by Calydor · · Score: 3, Informative

      The 0.21 is percent. In Denmark, and I'm guessing Germany as well, we count it in promille, which is 1/1000. So yeah, 0.5 promille is 0.05 percent. I actually had to stop and think about this for a second because the numbers instinctively felt wrong for this very reason.

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    13. Re: Uber? by Gription · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah. I didn't guess that from the graduation photo in the article. They really pumped up the "daughter" relationship and then buried the "she is quite past the age of adulthood" detail way down in the article.
      In this case there is really no reason for them to portray the incident in this light other than it is a more spectacular news-bite laid out this way.

      Really this should have been reported as an irresponsible adult through their own stupid actions killing themselves and another person.

      (A little secret I've learned is no matter how much power a car has it will still only accelerate as hard as you push down on the gas pedal!!!)

    14. Re:Uber? by NatasRevol · · Score: 3, Funny

      It's a 7/11 conspiracy!

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    15. Re:Uber? by Maury+Markowitz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > Ford Escort or Chevy Cruz, they'd probably be alive today

      Driving when that drunk can be fatal in any car. ANY car.

    16. Re:Uber? by TWX · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Now consider how tech is going to continue to advance until Tesla and those electric motors puts the power of a Veyron into the hands of anyone who can sign for a car loan but doesn't know that that kind of speed belongs only on the track. A 1979 Toyota Tercel has no business with a modern 5.2 L Flat Plane Crank V8 bolted onto it, particularly because the suspension and steering can't handle the power and the driver of such an abomination is probably a goddam fool, likely to pound down a few six-packs before heading out for Zombie night at Applebees. The only razor-thin silver-lining in the article reported by the OP is they didn't mow down a sidewalk-full of bystanders before the smeared themselves.

      If tech advances until torque and horsepower become trivial, we will have to have governors built-in to cars because the road has to be shared and driving like an idiot will become not a matter of a broken leg but something a lot more permanent. On the track or the salt flats, do what you want. On the streets there's a point where basic transportation becomes a suicide machine, and I don't want to share those streets with overpowered idiots.

      You really don't have any idea how automotive history played out. The late seventies to the early nineties are an abberation where there were relatively few powerful production cars. From the thirties onward, the push was for ever increasing amounts of power. In the late sixties we hit the peak with American car manufacturers cramming well over 400hp into cars that had absolutely atrocious handling and road-grip. Take a Plymouth with a 426 Hemi, you had almost 70% of the mass over the front non-drive axle, you had skinny bias-ply tires, you had firm torsion bars because of the mass of the engine. For weight savings on cars like the Roadrunner and GTX you often had antiswaybar-delete, such that the cars really suffered body roll in turns.

      Fuel availability problems from the manufactured oil crisis of the mid seventies, coupled with a slow ratcheting of environmental requirements and fuel economy requirements, forced horsepower down. This is certainly partially responsible for the American attempts with turbocharging in the eighties and early nineties and attempting to add power to the small FWD chassis despite initial development as economy cars, and it was only when automakers finally fully embraced symmetrical multiport fuel injection with computer control, multiple stages of catalytic conversion, and high-gear-count transmissions that power, fuel economy, and emissions were all achievable, albeit with cars that are significantly more complex and expensive.

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    17. Re:Uber? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He even keeps repeating the same "0 - 60 in 3.1 seconds" over and over. If anyone bothers to Google it, that is only possible in Ludacris or Insane mode which isn't even available on all cars. You need to purchase it, install it, and enable it to get that close. Otherwise, it is no different than any other high end sports car.

      It is sad, but drunk people die in car crashes. Don't drink and die. Its not more complicated than that.

    18. Re: Uber? by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You want "fake news" ? This is a great example of framing the story in such a way to cause distortion of emotion to elicit a particular result. Using words like "daughter / child" in combination is designed to make the person seem younger than 27 age that she was. Its like when we want to treat an 18 year old as an adult "Man/Woman" or as a child "Boy/Girl/Teenager". Man accused of murder .. one emotion, boy/teen accused of murder is quite a different one.

      It is all about creating the correct sensationalism and it is all part of the "fake news" that people are complaining about.

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    19. Re: Uber? by dave420 · · Score: 4, Informative

      No, this is just poor journalism. Fake news is where the entire story is nonsense.

    20. Re:Uber? by stealth_finger · · Score: 5, Funny

      We don't measure BAC in percents around here but rather in permilles. That might have been the confusion.

      I think the confusion is US measures permiles and Germany does perkilometer

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    21. Re:Uber? by thegarbz · · Score: 4, Informative

      0.5 promille = 0.05%

      Its a linguistic confusion.

    22. Re:Uber? by Joce640k · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And... don't you have to select a special "ludicrous" mode to get the car to accelerate that fast?

      This guy is just after money. I hope the judge throws him out and makes him pay for wasted time.

      --
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    23. Re:Uber? by ranton · · Score: 5, Insightful

      To be fair, although she was drunk as shit and should have never been behind a wheel, it appears from camera footage that she was swerving to avoid ANOTHER car that was traveling the wrong way on the street.

      Driving drunk is not much of a problem if nothing unexpected happens on your way home. Even though someone has a 2500% greater chance of having an accident with a .20 BAC, that only increases the chances of an accident on a 10 mile trip from 0.002% to about 0.04625% (or 1 in 2000 10 mile drunk driving trips). Nearly 100% of people who drive drunk don't get into an accident.

      Driving drunk is mostly just a problem because something unexpected might happen, like another car driving the wrong way on a street. When drunk you don't have the necessary reaction time to adjust and an accident becomes very likely.

      --
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    24. Re: Uber? by HornWumpus · · Score: 3

      In Germany it's graduated as well. 0.05 (very slightly buzzed) is 'DUI', big shit, license gone for 6 months. But 0.15 (actually drunk, the same as the pre mad mothers hysteria, American DUI level) is, 'see a shrink for a year and demonstrate a year of complete alcohol abstinence' (in a country that has an beer garden attached to every courthouse, police station and air traffic control center) before you get your license back, no slips. Blood tests for Alcohol use required.

      --
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    25. Re:Uber? by torkus · · Score: 3

      You're correct. That mode is also for launching from a standstill, not tooling down the street and suddenly going to warp speed.

      With that said, even just nailing the 'gas' pedal in a high performance car is going to get you moving...and fast.

      There's exactly nothing different between this and any other vehicle being in an accident with the given circumstances (DUI, head-on, etc.) because basically ANY car is capable of going fast enough to kill you if you hit a tree.

      So either the claim is total BS or it would apply to any car. Ever.

      Sorry your kid is dead, but how about blaming the ALCOHOL or the DRIVER of the other car that she swerved to avoid?

      --
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    26. Re:Uber? by AaronW · · Score: 3

      While I don't have the new P90D or P100D I can attest that my Tesla P85 does accelerate quite nicely, even at highway speeds and it reacts nearly instantaneously. It's not the car's fault that the drunk driver lost control. When you have a performance car, you have to respect it. As far as performance cars go, my model S seems to be quite forgiving with it easy to maintain control even under hard acceleration. I can't comment on the newer all-wheel drive P models, but from what I've heard they're even better.

      I've read about a number of very bad accidents with the model S where people walked away unharmed such as this accident where a 40 ton big-rig rear-ended a 5000-pound model S at 40MPH. Here's another one. The most interesting part is where he says, “I was pushed off road a good 100 ft. Initially, I was thinking I wouldn’t be able to get the car out But with some assistance from the tow truck driver & firemen I was able to drive it back on the road and eventually home.”

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  2. Dont Buy It by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you dont want a car that accelerates quickly dont buy a car that accelerates quickly.

    1. Re: Dont Buy It by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes. He's had an extreme emotional experience and is now irrational, at least where this topic is concerned. It's too much to expect a parent to say "my daughter got blind drunk and crashed her car. She is solely responsible for her and her passenger's deaths."

      So we should stop publicising his grief stricken grasping at justification.

    2. Re:Dont Buy It by tsqr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sure, he is now trying to find blame in others rather accept his daughter is entirely to blame for driving drunk and killing someone else.

      Well, since the car belonged to the passenger and not the driver, I think it might be appropriate to say that the "someone else" in this case may have actually killed himself and the girl by saying, "I'm too drunk; why don't you drive?".

  3. Father of the year by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Alternative headline: father explains parenting strategy for raising irresponsible children.

    "The key is to blame others," he said.

    1. Re:Father of the year by shakah · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Alternative headline: father explains parenting strategy for raising irresponsible children.

      "The key is to blame others," he said.

      Another alternative:"father begins laying the foundation for wrongful death suit defense" (for when Mr. McCarthy's estate sues).

  4. Reverse logic by mwvdlee · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Had she been in another vehicle, she would have been alive for me to yell at her for driving after drinking"

    LMFTFY

    "Had she been drinking under the legal limit, she would have been alive AND still had her vehicle"

    Count your blessings your daughter only murdered one passenger, and not more innocent bystanders.

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    1. Re:Reverse logic by Jason+Levine · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This doesn't remove the "driving drunk" as a blame factor, it just adds "car driving the wrong way down a one way street" to the list. Her being drunk likely contributed to poor reactions that led to the accident. However, this doesn't add "the car accelerates like a rocket ship" to the list of causes to the accident, despite what the father says.

      As a father, I get the impulse to not want to blame your child. Not to mention that he just lost his daughter. That's not a time in a person's life when they are 100% rational. Still, the hard truth is that his daughter was at least half to blame (with the other half going to the driver going the wrong way). The car's acceleration wasn't the cause of his daughter's death.

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    2. Re:Reverse logic by squiggleslash · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Moderate Drink driving is probably fairly safe in circumstances where nothing happens that would require you take action. Sure, if you're blind drunk to the point you can't even stay in your lane then an accident is inevitable, but if you're merely at the stage that your judgment is severely impaired, then the accidents will happen only if you actually have to use your judgment.

      Which is probably why so many people drive drunk - they've driven drunk before, nothing happened, because nothing unexpected happened, so giving them a false sense of security.

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    3. Re:Reverse logic by dcollins117 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Speckman swerved to avoid another car going the wrong way down a one way street. I would not be so quick to put all the blame on her for driving drunk.

      It doesn't work that way. In the eyes of the law and insurance companies, if you're in an automobile accident while driving impaired, you're at fault no matter the circumstances. This is why we don't drink and drive.

      In this instance we have an inexperienced woman driver, high performance sports car and the driver's BAL was three times the limit. Perfect trifecta. I feel for the guy who got in the car with her.

    4. Re:Reverse logic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Incorrect.

      Whether or not a totally sober person may have had exactly the same result can in no way COMPLETELY remove "driving drunk" as a blame factor.

      She shouldn't have been driving drunk period. She drove when she she shouldn't have been, it's a factor in the deaths.

    5. Re:Reverse logic by grnbrg · · Score: 3, Informative

      The point he is making is that the vastly most common outcome of most bad decisions is.... nothing at all. It doesn't make it a good thing. But it does explain why it is so common.

      Drive drunk? Probably nothing will happen.
      Don't buy insurance? Your house probably won't burn down.
      Eat uncooked meat? You probably won't get sick.

  5. Alcohol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yup, the cause was a drunk driver not how fast the car accelerated. Could of done the same thing in any car.

    1. Re: Alcohol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Could of, should of, would of. This truly is a story of the ofs and the of nots.

  6. Idiot by Gojira+Shipi-Taro · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "This is a vehicle that travels from 0 to 60 in 3.1 seconds," Speckman also said during the interview. "She's clearly having to swerve to miss a vehicle going the wrong way on a one-way street. If her foot should happen to hit the accelerator, it's like a rocket ship. I don't know why they have to make a car that does that."

    Because some people WANT a car that does that. There's no reason you had to buy it though. Entirely your fault. Blame yourself. Every single day of the rest of your life blame yourself.

    --
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    1. Re:Idiot by jeremyp · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Maybe her foot wouldn't have hit the accelerator if she wasn't drunk.

      --
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    2. Re:Idiot by hipp5 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Blame yourself. Every single day of the rest of your life blame yourself.

      Or blame your daughter for drunk driving. Or even better, don't bother (she's dead). Just grieve, accept that shit happens, and accept that throwing blame around doesn't really fix anything in this case.

    3. Re:Idiot by esposed · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Woah. I felt like this was way passed the line. Blaming a grieving father for words that come from a place we can only hope we will never understand is pretty lame. There's few things in life you get a pass on, but the death of a child is certainly one of those things. Relax.

    4. Re:Idiot by dwillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Agreed, and is he suing the bar that served the drinks? Or perhaps the drink manufacturers themselves. After all if they hadn't made and sold the booze, she wouldn't have drank so much that she couldn't react safely to the wrong-way driver.

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  7. Sigh by ledow · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They're over the limit?

    Sorry, whatever the ultimate cause of the accident, they were unfit to drive, thus pontificating over what they "would have" done in another is absolutely pointless. This driver got into a car and drove off when there was even a RISK of being near or over the limit and never questioned it.

    They are, therefore, a BAD DRIVER. The cause of their death - whether that's a guy on the wrong side of the road, unintended acceleration, a fire, etc. is incidental to their decision to drive. That's why we make brakes and steering wheels and train people to pass a test to ensure they're fit to drive, so you can avoid obstacles, stop the car, press the right pedal and not lose control if you're being a driver of even satisfactory driving skill.

    Yeah, it's sad. Yeah that kind of acceleration is unnecessary. Yeah, maybe there was a guy on your side of the road - it happens, there are idiots everywhere and people use the other side for overtaking, manoeuvres, etc. all the time. But the driver drove a car without knowing its capabilities, or feeling discomfort at it themselves enough to NOT drive it, or without taking "due care" (a phrase that will come up a lot) to ensure they didn't accelerate unintentionally no matter the situation. And they chose to do so while their judgement was impaired beyond legal limits.

    Contributing factors are the least of your problems, compared to telling your OTHER sons and daughters, and their friends and family to NEVER DRIVE DRUNK if they don't want to kill themselves and others.

    That you have to state that to an adult is really a sad state of affairs.

    If it had been on a Harley (there are electric Harley's now too!), and they'd done the same, would you be calling for motorbikes to be outlawed where you weren't saying that before? The device is not the problem - someone pressing the throttle when they mean the brake is never going to end well, even for a fraction of a second. The problem is that you have allowed yourself to bring up your children to think that drink-driving is fine and acceptable, even if you know it's illegal, and then blame others when your KILLER of a child takes someone else out too by driving drunk.

    Fuck, I don't even let work colleagues do that. I have literally removed people's keys and they've started fights with me over doing so. If your own child did it, fix that problem before you look at ANYTHING else.

  8. Sorry by argStyopa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...as much as I'd like to strongly disagree with him, I'm simply not going to go after something a parent says after losing a child. No matter how dumb or self-destructive the child was, etc.

    That person is grasping at whatever straws they can to maintain their sanity. They're out of bounds.

    Now, I would take to task the editor(s) of the Indianapolis Star for printing that shit. At a certain point, morally, one would have to say "You know, maybe that doesn't need to be in our article."

    --
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    1. Re:Sorry by haruchai · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ...as much as I'd like to strongly disagree with him, I'm simply not going to go after something a parent says after losing a child. No matter how dumb or self-destructive the child was, etc.

      That person is grasping at whatever straws they can to maintain their sanity. They're out of bounds.

      Now, I would take to task the editor(s) of the Indianapolis Star for printing that shit. At a certain point, morally, one would have to say "You know, maybe that doesn't need to be in our article."

      While I wouldn't cut him any slack for such a stupid statement, I don't hold it again anyone who would.
      But if he files a lawsuit against Tesla because of this, then both he & his lawyer are a$$holes$

      --
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    2. Re:Sorry by mysticgoat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If in fact this was a father's grieving rant, then I agree with your sentiment. Give him space.

      Unfortunately there are features in this story that suggest that this might be the beginning of a wrongful death suit against Tesla. The mention of a lawyer being involved, and therefore presumably advising the "distraught" father about what to say in public. How big a settlement might be squeezed from Tesla? If you are going for a fat settlement, then you don't need a winning case, you don't have to be able to prove anything. You just need to demonstrate that you can be a massive pain in the butt until you are paid off. Will we next be hearing comparisons between Tesla's acceleration pedal and the Ford Pinto's gas tank?

      People who are truly grieving usually don't make such a public spectacle of it.

    3. Re:Sorry by Strudelkugel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What's truly disgusting about this tragic situation is the the attorney. A good attorney would let the client know that given the circumstances, odds of winning in court are minimal and the pain of going through the pretrial procedures will be painful. Tesla might settle to make the case go away, but the client will still have to go through discovery and depositions. A settlement wont bring the people back, and it won't be that The defense will be all over the daughter's "lifestyle choices", the relationship with her boss, etc. The family of her boss will be forced to endure the same interrogation. The client's attorney doesn't care - He just sees easy money, no matter how much pain it causes everyone including his client. This is the kind of case that gives attorneys a very bad reputation.

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  9. I take it he's campaigning for by Chrisq · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I take it he's campaigning for the reinstatement of the red flag law. Seriously how fast does he think cars should be allowed to travel of accelerate? If all were limited to 20mph then almost all accidents would be survivable (though daresay you'd get some drunk idiots driving into rivers or off cliffs even at that speed).

  10. Captain Obvious police report. by geekmux · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "...A report released last week by the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department disclosed that Speckman had a blood-alcohol level of 0.21, almost three times the legal limit "

    As a parent, I cannot imagine the grief this father is dealing with right now, but I certainly I hope this lapse of common sense in a desperate attempt to blame the car is temporary, given this report released by Captain Obvious.

    Unfortunately, the cars performance is not the main factor that caused a loss of life. One must not only be sober, but capable of handling a car that can deliver Fast and Furious performance. While I don't agree with this stupid and pointless race to ludicrous speed in the EV market right now, if you can't handle a car, then don't drive the fucking thing, no matter what technology is powering it.

  11. Re:What's the emoticon for mouth hanging open? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, we should not expect distraught parents to STFU after a child dies. We should expect reporters to leave them alone and not take statements at such a trying time when they aren't thinking clearly. In this case, he gets swarmed because there was a Tesla involved. Had it been any other vehicle, he would have been left alone to say whatever irrational things might come out of any distraught parent's mouth after death of a child.

    The reporters should STFU and leave the guy alone.

  12. the humanity! by ooloorie · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Had she been in another vehicle, she would have been alive for me to yell at her for driving after drinking," Speckman told The Indianapolis Star in an interview at his attorney's office. "This is a vehicle that travels from 0 to 60 in 3.1 seconds"

    It is of course totally evil how Tesla forces wealthy 27-year-olds to buy massively overpowered cars for $100000, then forces them to get completely drunk, and then forces them to get behind the wheel and endanger other drivers! The humanity! There ought to be a law to protect the people from such evil corporations! /sarc

  13. Setting up for a shakedown by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Standard operating procedure for the ambulance chasers. Sling as much mud as possible, watch to see what sticks, and then pile on to use that kind of mud in the trial. I am sure they are trying to find what would make Tesla settle out of court. Then the avalanche will start.

    The way the courts work, if there are N causes for an accident, all N causes are liable for full 100% of the damages. This is a necessary consequence of allowing limited liability corporations. If we assign liability proportionally, immediately all corporations will spawn child corporations that will all act as one way valve. Profits flow upstream and liability stops with them. So they will not have the assets to pay for the damages they cause. It is already happening to some extent, in taxes, income stream management, and a few other areas.

    But the way the system is gamed, no one seems to benefit, other than the trial lawyers.

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  14. Re:What's the emoticon for mouth hanging open? by omnichad · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What, are you wanting ethics in journalism now? We haven't had that for a long while.

  15. No, 1000 times no by mpercy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I feel bad for the father, but blaming the car his daughter was driving at 0.21 BAC is a non-starter. I don't care if it was a Pinto and she was going 80MPH in reverse when she hit the tree causing it to burst into flames.

    It's not even clear that she'd be alive in a different car leaving him to "yell at her". Thankfully, the only person she murdered was someone stupid enough to get in the car with her.

    If this progresses to a lawsuit against Tesla (which is not a company I have a lot of positive feelings for), it'll be another example of why we can't have anything nice. Stupid people seem intent on making the rest of society pay for their stupidity and we keep letting them, instead of letting them suffer the sometimes fatal consequences on their own.

  16. The funny thing about decimals by Smerta · · Score: 4, Informative

    In Germany the limit is 0.05; she was 4x this level.

  17. Re:What's the emoticon for mouth hanging open? by tflf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Appears Mr. Speckman had a lawyer lined up before he talked to the press. The news article (an exclusive) reads more like well-coached groundwork for a product-liability lawsuit than the outburst of a grieving distraught parent after the senseless, needless (and self-inflicted) death of a child.

  18. Re:It's always someone elses fault by tsqr · · Score: 4, Informative

    Not only did the guy buy the Tesla knowing full well what its capabilities were, he let his kiddo borrow it.

    He didn't buy the car, and neither did his daughter. The Tesla belonged to the passenger, who was also drunk. This is in TFA (why do I bother?). Not hard to visualize what probably happened: "I'm drunk; why don't you drive?" "Oh, wow, I've never driven one of these before; this will be fun!"

  19. Bullshit by ArchieBunker · · Score: 3, Informative

    The Carrera was a race car that was made street legal. Even on Top Gear Jeremy Clarkson admitted it wasn't fun to drive because it was so touchy. There are plenty of other high horsepower cars that handle much better from companies like McLaren or Koenigsegg. Hell Koenigsegg even has a video showing how you can swerve the wheel at speed and not spin out.

    --
    Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
  20. Walker's death was a different situation by SIGBUS · · Score: 4, Informative

    While it would be likely in this Tesla crash, in Walker's crash there was another aggravating factor: aged tires. Nine-year-old tires on a high-performance car are a recipe for disaster.

    --
    Oh, no! You have walked into the slavering fangs of a lurking grue!
  21. Norway is way lower than that by Terje+Mathisen · · Score: 4, Informative

    Norway has had 0.02 as the legal limit for _many_ years now, this basically means that you cannot drive after a single half liter of beer, glass of wine or a shot of whisky.

    I.e. all driving after drinking is drunk driving. BTW, when Norway introduced a legal driving limit in 1936, it was the first country in the world to do so:

    http://www.promille.no/promill...

    This web site (in Norwegian) shows the current rules: 0.02 to 0.05% leads to a fine of 1.5 months worth of your gross salary (or average income if you're a stock broker or similar), which means that it can get very expensive indeed when if the driver is a rich idiot. (Those fines are for when you are stopped without any accident, in a crash they will go up and your insurance won't cover anything.)

    At 0.12%, i.e. 50% over the US limit, you are looking at at least 21 days in prison on top of that huge fine.

    We have a lot more Teslas per capita here than in any other country but I haven't heard of a single drunk driving incident so far.

    "Fast cars don't kill people, bad drivers kill people."

    --
    "almost all programming can be viewed as an exercise in caching"