I’ve posted this story before, but this one from Arstechnica.com has far more details into what the Judge has said and done in this case.
I’ve posted this story before, but this one from Arstechnica.com has far more details into what the Judge has said and done in this case.
Maybe? But that’s not what this case is about. This is a civil case, not a criminal one. If I were to guess, this is “Wrongful death” (ie: negligence)… not manslaughter (ie: recklessness).
Remember that “someone dies” is split up into different laws depending on intent. Murder (intended to kill someone), Homicide / Manslaughter (recklessness: you did something you weren’t supposed to do. You knew it might kill someone and you did kill someone), and finally “Wrongful Death” (negligence: you were supposed to do something but you didn’t, leading to someone’s death).
As a civil-case, this Tesla Autopilot case is set to lesser-damages (there’s no jailtime here).