Uber driver was watching TV just before self-driving crash

Published Jun 22, 2018

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Tempe, Arizona - Police say evidence shows the "safety" driver behind the wheel of a

self-driving Uber was distracted and streaming a television show

on her phone right up until about the time of a fatal accident

in March, and the crash that rocked the nascent industry was "entirely avoidable".

A 318-page report from the Tempe Police Department, released

late on Thursday in response to a public records request, said

the driver, Rafaela Vasquez, repeatedly looked down and not at

the road, glancing up just a half second before the car hit

49-year-old Elaine Herzberg, who was crossing the street at

night. According to the report, Vasquez could face charges of

vehicle manslaughter. Police said that, based on testing, the

crash was "deemed entirely avoidable" if Vasquez had been paying

attention.

Police obtained records from Hulu, an online service for

streaming television shows and movies, which showed Vasquez's

account was playing the television talent show "The Voice" the

night of the crash for about 42 minutes, ending at 9:59 p.m.,

which "coincides with the approximate time of the collision,"

the report says. It is not clear if Vasquez will be charged, and police

submitted their findings to county prosecutors, who will make

the determination. 

Uber's interior camera shows driver Rafaela Vasquez at almost the same moment. File image : Tempe Police Department via AP

The Uber car was in autonomous mode at the time of

the crash, but Uber, like other self-driving car developers,

requires a back-up driver in the car to intervene when the

autonomous system fails or a tricky driving situation occurs. Vasquez looked up just 0.5 seconds before the crash, after

keeping her head down for 5.3 seconds, the Tempe Police report

said. Uber's self-driving Volvo SUV was traveling at about 70km/h.

Uber declined to comment, on the report, although an Uber spokeswoman said in May the company was

undergoing a "top-to-bottom safety review," and had brought in a

former federal transportation official to help improve the

company's safety culture. The company prohibits the use of any

mobile device by safety drivers while the self-driving cars are

on a public road, and drivers are told they can be fired for

violating this rule.

Police said a review of video from inside the car showed

Vasquez was looking down during the trip, and her face "appears

to react and show a smirk or laugh at various points during the

times that she is looking down." The report found that Vasquez

"was distracted and looking down" for close to seven of the

nearly 22 minutes prior to the collision.

Tempe Police detective Michael McCormick asked Hulu for help

in the investigation, writing in a 10 May email to the company

that "this is a very serious case where the charges of vehicle

manslaughter may be charged, so correctly interpreting the

information provided to us is crucial." Hulu turned over the

records on 31 May.

NTSB investigators examine the damamge to the self-driving Uber Volvo after the crash. File image: Tempe Police Department via AP

According to a report in May by the National

Transportation Safety Board, which is also investigating the

crash, Vasquez told federal investigators she had been

monitoring the self-driving interface in the car and that

neither her personal nor business phones were in use until after

the crash. That report showed Uber had disabled the emergency

braking system in the Volvo, and Vasquez began braking less than

a second after hitting Herzberg.

Herzberg, who was homeless, was walking her bicycle across

the street, outside of a crosswalk on a four-lane road, the

night of March 18 when she was struck by the front right side of

the Volvo. The police report faulted Herzberg for "unlawfully crossing

the road at a location other than a marked crosswalk."

In addition to the report, police on Thursday released a number of audio files of 911 calls made by Vasquez, who waited at

the scene for police, and bystanders the night of the crash;

photographs of Herzberg's damaged bicycle and the Uber car; and

videos from police officers' body cameras that capture the

minutes after the crash, including harrowing screams in the

background.

The crash dealt Uber a major setback in its efforts to

develop self-driving cars, and the company shut down its

autonomous car testing program in Arizona after the incident. It

says it plans to begin testing elsewhere during 2018, although

in some cities it will have to first win over increasingly wary

regulators.

AP

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